Microbial vaccine and vaccine vector

ABSTRACT

The present invention includes cold-adapted, acid-fast bacterium for use as a vaccine and a vaccine vector. In preferred embodiments, the cold-adapted, acid-fast bacterium is a  Mycobacteria , for example,  Mycobacteria shottsii.

CONTINUING APPLICATION DATA

This application is the §371 U.S. National Stage of International Application No. PCT/US2006/046832, filed 8 Dec. 2006, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. Nos. 60/749,140, filed Dec. 9, 2005, and 60/781,303, filed Mar. 10, 2006, all of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.

BACKGROUND

There are many infectious diseases for which an effective vaccine has not yet been developed, and many of the currently available vaccines provide only partial protection against disease. Further, there are gaps in the vaccine field. Live vaccines produce stronger, broader, and more durable immunity than other types of vaccines. There is a need for a safer live vaccine vehicle, which will be unable to cause disease even in immunosuppressed individuals. There is also a need for vaccines that induce cell-mediated immunity and not just antibody-based immunity. And, there is a need to induce protective immune responses directly at the mucosal surfaces of the body, where most pathogens gain entry. Thus, there is a need for improved vaccines.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The present invention includes a pharmaceutical composition including an acid-fast bacterium with a maximum survival temperature of 30° C. and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier. In some embodiments, the acid-fast bacterium with a maximum survival temperature of 30° C. is Mycobacterium shottsii, Mycobacterium pseudoshottsii, or Mycobacterium liflandii.

The present invention also includes a pharmaceutical composition including Mycobacterium shottsii and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.

The present invention also includes a pharmaceutical composition including a transgenic M. shottsii with at least one heterologous antigen and/or immunogen; and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier. In some embodiments, at least one heterologous antigen and/or immunogen includes a human immunodeficiency (HIV) virus antigen and/or immunogen. In some embodiments, at least one heterologous antigen and/or immunogen includes a Mycobacterium tuberculosis antigen and/or immunogen. In some embodiments, at least one heterologous antigen and/or immunogen includes an influenza virus antigen and/or immunogen. In some embodiments, the influenza virus antigen or immunogen includes a hemaglutinin (HA) antigen or immunogen. In some embodiments, the influenza virus infects humans or swine. In some embodiments, the transgenic M. shottsii includes a plurality of heterologous antigens and/or immunogens.

In some embodiments, a pharmaceutical composition of the present invention further includes an adjuvant. In some embodiments, a pharmaceutical composition of the present invention is formulated for administration to the mucosa. In some embodiments, a pharmaceutical composition of the present invention is formulated for intranasal administration.

Also included in the present invention is a transgenic M. shottsii, wherein the transgenic M. shottsii includes at least one heterologous antigen and/or immunogen. In some embodiments, at least one heterologous antigen and/or immunogen includes a human immunodeficiency (HIV) virus antigen and/or immunogen. In some embodiments, at least one heterologous antigen and/or immunogen includes a Mycobacterium tuberculosis antigen and/or immunogen. In some embodiments, at least one heterologous antigen and/or immunogen includes an influenza virus antigen and/or immunogen. In some embodiments, the influenza virus antigen or immunogen includes a hemaglutinin (HA) antigen or immunogen. In some embodiments, the influenza virus infects humans or swine. In some embodiments, the transgenic M. shottsii includes a plurality of heterologous antigens and/or immunogens

Also included in the present invention are methods of treating or preventing tuberculosis in a mammalian subject by administering a transgenic M. shottsii of the present invention or a pharmaceutical composition of the present invention.

Also included in the present invention are methods of inducing an immune response to an antigen or immunogen in a subject by administering to the subject a transgenic M. shottsii of the present invention or a pharmaceutical composition of the present invention.

Also included in the present invention are methods of treating or preventing at least one of a human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, an opportunistic infection or a disease that co-occurs with HIV infection by administering a transgenic M. shottsii of the present invention or a pharmaceutical composition of the present invention.

Also included in the present invention are methods of treating or preventing influenza by administering a transgenic M. shottsii of the present invention or a pharmaceutical composition of the present invention.

In some embodiments of the methods of the present invention, the transgenic M. shottsii or the pharmaceutical composition is administered to the subject's mucosa. In some embodiments of the methods of the present invention, the transgenic M. shottsii or the pharmaceutical composition is administered intranasally. In some embodiments of the methods of the present invention, the transgenic M. shottsii or the pharmaceutical composition induces an immune response in genital tissue of the subject. In some embodiments of the methods of the present invention, the subject is immunocompromised.

Unless otherwise specified, “a,” “an,” “the,” and “at least one” are used interchangeably and mean one or more than one.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF ILLUSTRATIVE EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION

The present invention provides improved vaccines and vaccine vectors. With the present invention, a cold-adapted, acid-fast bacterium is used as a vaccine and a vaccine vector. In preferred embodiments, the cold-adapted, acid-fast bacterium is a Mycobacteria, for example, Mycobacteria shottsii.

As used herein, acid-fast bacteria have an acid-fast cell wall that resist decolorization with an acid-alcohol mixture during the acid-fast stain procedure, retaining the initial dye carbol fuchsin and appearing red when viewed under the light microscope. Examples of acid-fast staining procedures include, but are not limited to, Kinyoun carbolfiachisin staining and Ziehl-Neelson staining.

As used herein, cold-adapted bacteria include bacteria that show a limited ability to survive at 37° C. and/or an inability to grow at 37° C. Cold-adapted bacteria include bacteria with a maximum survival temperature of about 30° C. Cold-adapted bacteria include bacteria that grow best at a temperature of about 22° C. to about 26° C. and do not grow at a temperature of about 37° C. Cold-adapted bacteria include bacteria that grow best at a temperature of about 23° C. to about 25° C. and do not grow at a temperature of about 37° C. Cold-adapted bacteria may survive culture at room temperature. Cold-adapted bacteria include bacteria that grow best at a temperature of about 23° C., at about 24° C., at about 24° C., or about 25° C. Cold-adapted means that a microbe can replicate at a colder than normal temperature, whereas temperature-sensitive means that replication is substantially reduced or eliminated at a higher temperature (Belshe, Virus Res. 2004; 103(1-2):177-85).

Cold-adapted, acid-fast bacteria include, for example, various species of Mycobacterium, various species of Nocardia, and various species of Corynebacterium. Cold-adapted, acid-fast species of Mycobacterium may include, but are not limited to, M. shottsii, M. pseudoshottsii, and M. lifandii. In some embodiments, the cold-adapted bacteria is not M. bovis, is not M. tuberculosis, and/or is not M. leprae. In a preferred embodiment, the cold-adapted bacteria is M. shottsii.

M. shottsii is a bacteria isolated from striped bass in the Chesapeake Bay, and identified as a new species in 2001 (Rhodes et al., Emerg Infect Dis. 2001; 7(5):896-9; Rhodes et al., Int J Syst Evol Microbiol. 2003; 53(Pt 2):421-4). Based upon genetic and lipid analysis, it is considered to be phylogenetically closely related to members of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex, a grouping that includes the attenuated live vaccine vector BCG. BCG has long been used in its native form as a vaccine against tuberculosis and leprosy, both diseases caused by mycobacteria. Importantly, BCG has been shown experimentally to be able to act as a vaccine vector. That is to say, it is able to induce protective immunity against diseases caused by unrelated pathogens when BCG genetically engineered to express antigens form those pathogens has been used as a vaccine. While vaccination with live BCG mycobacteria rarely causes disease in people with healthy immune systems, it can cause serious pathology, disseminated disease, and even death in subjects whose immune systems have been compromised by HIV infection, chemotherapy, immunosuppressive drugs, or a number of other circumstances.

A cold-adapted, acid-fast bacteria may serve as a vaccine and a vaccine vector for any of the uses as described herein. For example, a cold-adapted, acid-fast bacteria may serve as a vaccine useful to treat or prevent tuberculosis, including multidrug resistant (MDR) tuberculosis. A cold-adapted, acid-fast bacteria may, for example, serve as a vaccine vector useful to treat or prevent human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, influenza, an opportunistic infection, or a disease that co-occurs with HIV infection. A cold-adapted, acid-fast bacteria may, for example, serve as a vaccine or vaccine vector useful to treat or prevent a cancer. A cold-adapted, acid-fast bacteria may, for example, serve as a vaccine or vaccine vector useful to treat or prevent a veterinary disease or cancer.

The present invention includes a cold-adapted bacteria, such as, for example, M. shottsii, genetically engineered to express one or more antigens or immunogens from another organism, such as an infectious pathogen. A cold adapted bacteria can not grow at mammalian internal body temperature, (which is 37 degrees Celsius in humans). In fact, attempts to cultivate M. shottsii at temperatures of 30 degrees or above have been uniformly unsuccessful. Such temperature restricted growth make cold-adapted bacteria, such as M. shottsii, unable to cause a disseminated infection in mammals, and thus, make it substantially safer as a vaccine or as a vaccine vector. Because the organism cannot grow at body temperature, it can be used, for example, a nasal vaccine, where its growth or persistence is limited to the cooler superficial tissues of the nose and upper airways. Cold-adapted bacteria, including M. shottsii, will be especially useful as intranasal vaccines.

Cold-adaptation of viruses is a proven attenuation strategy for intranasal vaccines. Several cold-adapted intranasal viral vaccines for veterinary uses are in clinical use, and more are under development. A number of cold-adapted vaccines for human use are under development, including intranasal vaccines for respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), one of which is already in clinical trials, and a cold-adapted vaccine for PIV3. Already in clinical use is the cold-adapted influenza vaccine FluMist®. FluMist® combines three strains of influenza viruses, each of which is cold-adapted as well as temperature-sensitive.

Human influenza virus strains that have been purposefully adapted to grow at 25° C., but not at 37° C. form the basis of the FluMist® intranasal flu vaccine (NIAID NEWS, “Nasal spray vaccine prevents both the flu and flu-related earaches,” available on the world wide web at niaid.nih.gov; and Maassab and Bryant, Rev Med Virol. 1999; 9(4):237-44). The temperature growth limitations of such influenza strains allow replication in the superficial tissues of the upper respiratory passages, but prevent penetration deeper into the tissues or lower into the respiratory tract. Cold-adaptation is a key mechanism of attenuation that allows them to be used as vaccines. The cold-adaptation of the viral strains allows them to persist and replicate in the superficial nasopharyngeal tissues, at least until the host immune response eliminates them. This pattern of persistence and growth mimics a natural infection and produces a strong and durable immune memory response (Bardiya and Bae, Appl Microbiol Biotechnol. 2005; 67(3):299-305). As recently reported, the FluMist® vaccine provided 93% protection against the flu and, unexpectedly, 98% protection against a common complication of the flu in children, otitis media (Belshe et al., N Engl J Med. 1998; 338(20):1405-12; and Barnett, N Engl J Med. 1998; 338(20):1459-61). The temperature restriction of FluMist® viral strains resembles that of M. shottsii, indicating that M. shottsii, both in its native form or engineered to express antigens from other pathogens can be used as live nasal vaccines. While other viruses are being cold-adapted for use as nasal vaccines, a cold-adapted live bacteria has never been used as a vaccine or vaccine vector.

With the present invention, native or genetically engineered cold-adapted bacteria, including M. shottsii, can be used as effective and safe vaccines for the treatment and prevention of diseases caused by mycobacteria, including, but not limited to, tuberculosis, leprosy, M. ulcerans disease, Johnes disease, and opportunistic infections caused by M. aviun or other nontuberculous mycobacteria. With the present invention, native or genetically engineered cold-adapted bacteria, including M. shottsii, can be used as effective and safe vaccines for the treatment and prevention of tuberculosis, including multi-drug resistant (MDR) tuberculosis. Genetic modifications include, for example, those that further attenuate M. shottsii and/or those that introduce one or more transgenes.

With the present invention, native or genetically engineered cold-adapted bacteria, including M. shottsii, can be used as effective and safe vaccines for the treatment and prevention a variety of diseases, including, but not limited to, influenza, HIV, malaria, schistosomiasis, Chlamydia, mycoplasma, SARS, RSV, measles, Lyme disease, pneumococcal pneumonia, hepatitis B, and pneumonia caused by human metapneumovirus in variety of subjects. Subjects include, but are not limited to, humans, primates, swine, horses, cattle, chickens, turkeys, dogs, cats, and other livestock and domestic pets.

With the present invention, native or genetically engineered cold-adapted bacteria, including M. shottsii, can be used as effective and safe vaccines for the treatment and prevention a variety of cancers.

The present invention includes M. shottsii genetically modified to express one or more foreign antigens or immunogens. As used herein a foreign antigen or immunogen is a polypeptide that is heterologous with respect to M. shottsii. A genetically modified M. shottsii is a transgenic M. shottsii it includes one or more transgenes that function as, or encode, a foreign antigen or immunogen. Foreign antigens and/or immunogens can take the form of, for example, polynucleotides such as a DNA or RNA, as well as polypeptides. Foreign antigens or immunogens are preferably derived from a pathogenic organism, and can be, for example, viral or bacterial in origin, or obtained from a pathogenic protozoan or helminth. Optionally, the genetically modified M. shottsii includes genetic modifications that further attenuate M. shottsii.

Transgenic vaccine vector constructs may be include all or only a portion of the genome of the pathogen. If only a portion of the pathogen's genome is included, the transgenic vector preferably encodes, for example, immunogenic or immunostimulatory proteins or protein fragments. For example, in a preferred embodiment of a transgenic vaccine vector useful to treat or prevent influenza, the construct may include an influenza hemagglutinin (HA) gene, or a portion thereof. Promoters and signal sequences may be varied and codon usage may be optimizing for synthesis in mycobacteria.

Engineered cold-adapted bacteria of the present invention, include bacteria engineered to express foreign antigens from influenza, HIV, malaria, schistosomiasis, Chlamydia, mycoplasma, SARS, RSV, measles, pneumonia caused by human metapneumovirus, Lyme disease, pneumococcal pneumonia, hepatitis B, and other pathogens or cancer antigens, using previously described methods or any of the methods described herein. See, for example, Barletta et al., Res Microbiol. 1990; 141(7-8):931-9; Fuerst et al., Biotechnol Ther. 1991; 2(1-2):159-78; Stover et al., Nature. 1991 Jun. 6; 351(6326):456-60; Aldovini and Young, Nature. 1991 Jun. 6; 351(6326):479-82; and Winter et al., Gene. 1991 Dec. 20; 109(1):47-59; Barletta et al., Res Microbiol. 1990; 141:931-9; Fuerst et al., Biotechnol Ther. 1991; 2(1-2):159-78; Stover et al., Nature 1991; 351(6326):456-60; Aldovini and Young, Nature 1991; 351(6326):479-82; and Winter et al., Gene. 1991; 109:47-59).

A wide variety of systems for the introduction and expression of foreign genes into M. shottsii are available, including, but not limited to, any of those described herein. For example, a shuttle plasmid vector, that replicates extrachromosomally and carries 20 kb or more of foreign genetic material, or a shuttle plasmid vectors, that stably integrates into the mycobacterial chromosome along with large amounts of foreign DNA, can be used. By selecting various leader sequences or even by inserting foreign DNA into the sequence of a mycobacterial gene, it is possible to direct the expressed protein to the cell membrane, or to remain in the cytoplasm, or to be exported from the cell. Furthermore, a large number of native or foreign promoters are available to drive the expression of foreign genes, and production of foreign protein to levels of 10% of the total amount of cell protein is not unusual. Any of a variety of promoters may be used. For example, the hsp60 promoter from M. tuberculosis or the mycobacteriophage L5 promoter may be used.

Thus transgenic vaccines of the present invention can express many foreign antigens, unlike viral vaccine vectors that have a more limited capacity. For example, similar to efforts underway with a recombinant BCG, M. shottsii can be engineered to express expressing antigens, for example, from HIV, malaria, and M. tuberculosis, as a three-in-one vaccine. Similarly, multiple HIV antigenic sequences could be combined in a single mycobacterial-vectored vaccine—a recommended polyvalent approach to improving the breadth of HIV protection.

In comparison to viral vectors, bacterial vectors like M. shottsii have a large capacity for expressing inserted foreign genes. The present invention includes transgenic M. shottsii that express a plurality of heterologous antigens and/or immunogens.

The present invention includes vaccine compositions of native or genetically modified M. shottsii for use as a vaccine. Genetically modified M. shottsii for use as a vaccine vector is a transgenic M. shottsii; that is it includes one or more transgenes that function as, or encode, a foreign antigen or immunogen. Foreign antigens and/or immunogens can take the form of, for example, polynucleotides such as a DNA or RNA, as well as polypeptides. Foreign antigens or immunogens are preferably derived from a pathogenic organism, and can be, for example, viral or bacterial in origin, or obtained from a pathogenic protozoan or helminth. Optionally, the genetically modified M. shottsii for use as a vaccine vector includes genetic modifications that further attenuate M. shottsii.

A vaccine composition of the present invention may be a pharmaceutical composition, including naturally occurring or genetically modified M. shottsii, as well a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier. A vaccine composition may include an adjuvant. A vaccine composition may be pyrogen free. A vaccine composition may include an antiseptic agent and/or antifungal agent. A vaccine composition may include a preservative. A vaccine composition may be formulated for administration to the mucosa, for example for intranasal administration. It is expected that mucosal administration of the pharmaceutical composition to a mammalian subject will stimulate an immune response in mucosal tissues, including mucosal tissues that are remote from the site of administration, in addition to producing a systemic immune response in the subject. For example, it is expected that intranasal administration of a pharmaceutical composition of the invention will induce an immune response in genital tissue of the subject.

A vaccine composition of the present invention may be administered as a prophylactic or therapeutic vaccine or immunostimulant, and is especially suitable for administration to immunocompromised individuals.

The similarity of M. shottsii to M. bovis BCG and to other members of the MTB complex, especially in regards to its lipid coat, suggests that the vector will provide strong adjuvanticity, and induce both antibody and cell-mediated immune responses that will endure long after a single vaccine dose. Nasal vaccination is an attractive way to induce mucosal immunity, and could even be self administered in a pandemic situation.

For many reasons, M. shottsii has great potential as a live, attenuated vaccine against tuberculosis, which is caused by M. tuberculosis and which is one of the leading global causes of death. Because of its temperature-restricted growth, when administered intranasally, M. shottsii, will only persist in the superficial upper respiratory tissues of vaccinated mammals. The lipid composition of the cell wall of M. shottsii resembles that of M. tuberculosis. This lipid-similarity may allow M. shottsii to induce cross-reactive and protective responses to TB through activation of group 1 CD1-restricted T cells. And, nucleic acid sequencing of several gene loci have found very high homology between M. shottsii genes and M. tuberculosis genes, raising the possibility that protein antigens may induce cross-reactive cell-mediated immunity.

BCG vaccine, which is an attenuated version of M. bovis developed more than 80 years ago, is routinely used to vaccinate newborns throughout most of the world because it is the only vaccine available against tuberculosis. Immunization with BCG seems most helpful in infants, reducing the incidence of severe, disseminated forms of TB. Controlled trials, however, have established that BCG offers little or no protection against the more prevalent pulmonary forms of the disease. Furthermore, BCG vaccination seems to have the least effectiveness in the regions of the world that are most ravaged by TB. In addition, BCG has made no evident impact on the global TB epidemic. The estimated number of new cases of TB and the per capita incidence worldwide continue to rise each year (A century of tuberculosis. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2004; 169(11):1181-6; and Dye et al., JAMA. 2005; 293(22):2767-753). Although the incidence of TB in the United States is no longer rising, the disease remains a significant problem in many cities, especially among immigrants and HIV-infected individuals. In the U.S., as elsewhere, the spread of multidrug resistant strains of M. tuberculosis threatens to effectively roll back our ability to control the disease to the situation of the pre-antibiotic era.

The best hope of bringing the global epidemic of TB under control is the development of a new, effective TB vaccine (Castanon-Arreola and Lopez-Vidal, Ann Clin Microbiol Antimicrob. 2004; 3(1):10; McMurray, Int J. Parasitol. 2003; 33(5-6):547-54; Brennan et al., Tuberculosis (Edinb). 2001; 81(5-6):365-8; and Flynn, (Edinb). 2004; 84(1-2):93-101). Because of the urgent need for a new TB vaccine, a global research effort is now underway, and a large number of living and nonliving candidate vaccines have been explored. Three candidate vaccines, a recombinant BCG over-expressing antigen (Ag) 85B, a modified vaccinia virus over-expressing Ag85A, and a fusion peptide encompassing two antigens (termed 72f) combined with an adjuvant, are now in phase I clinical trials. A transgenic M. shottsii of the present invention may include one of more of these antigens.

The vaccines of the present invention may be employed in many ways, for example, as preventative vaccines, as vaccines administered during latent infection to prevent reactivation, or as a therapeutic vaccine. The vaccines of the present invention may administered by any of a variety of routes. For example, they may be administered intradermally, intranasally, intramuscularly, subcutaneously, topically to a mucosal surface, or orally. In a preferred embodiment, they are administered intranasally.

M. shottsii vaccines of the present invention will have the advantages of a live attenuated vaccine. Live attenuated vaccines have traditionally been found to confer longer lasting immunity, and to require fewer immunizations than nonliving vaccines. These attributes make them attractive vaccine candidates for TB, which threatens people throughout their lifespans and is especially prevalent in regions of the world where lengthy immunization regimens are difficult to maintain.

Live TB vaccine candidates that have been investigated include genetically attenuated forms of M. tuberculosis, modified forms of BCG, unrelated attenuated vectors such as adenovirus, vaccinia virus or salmonella that have been engineered to express TB antigens, and a few additional mycobacteria species (Nor and Musa, Tuberculosis (Edinb). 2004; 84(1-2):102-9; and Kamath et al., Vaccine. 2005; 23(29):3753-61). The last category includes forms of M. vaccae, M. microti, M. habana, and M. smegmatis, several of which have demonstrated some positive results at some stage of testing, although none have undergone SCID mouse model testing to evaluate their likely safety in immunocompromised individuals.

Vaccines of the present invention overcome critical safety concerns and regulatory issues of the above discussed live TB vaccines. The greatest drawback of currently available live vaccines is the risk of causing illness or unacceptable pathology, both of which are most likely in immunocompromised people. This has become an increasingly important issue in light of the global epidemic of HIV infection. It is now well established that BCG vaccination can cause disseminated, potentially fatal, disease in immunocompromised people (Besnard et al., Pediatr Infect Dis J. 1993; 12(12):993-7; Talbot et al., Clin Infect Dis. 1997; 24(6):1139-46; Hesseling et al., Clin Infect Dis. 2003; 37(9):1226-33. Erratum in: Clin Infect Dis. 2003; 37(12):1727). (Corbett et al., Arch Intern Med. 2003; 163(9):1009-21). Because of the overlap between the HIV and TB epidemics, it is now generally agreed that any new live TB vaccine needs to be at least as attenuated, and preferably more attenuated, than the current BCG vaccine. The vaccines of the present invention provide this advantage. With the present invention, M. shottsii will serve as a novel platform technology for the development of vaccines for a variety of diseases. M. shottsii can be used either directly as a vaccine for diseases caused by other mycobacteria (such as tuberculosis), or can be genetically engineered to express inserted genes from pathogenic organisms such as HIV or influenza viruses, to create vaccines for such diseases. M. shottsii can be genetically engineered to express cancer genes, to create vaccines for the prevention or treatment of cancer. This highly novel and promising platform technology could form the basis of a vaccine for virtually any infectious disease for which pathogen protective antigens have been identified.

A needle-free intranasal vaccine delivery has substantial advantages over most candidate TB vaccines currently being studied. It has been clearly established that vaccination through mucosal routes, including respiratory, gastrointestinal, ocular, or urogenital mucosal surfaces, generates both mucosal and systemic immune responses, whereas systemic routes of vaccination usually only generate systemic immunity. Mucosal immunization therefore offers advantages for any pathogen that invades through or proliferates within mucosal tissues—such as M. tuberculosis. The ability of mucosal vaccination to also induce systemic immunity means that vaccine efficacy can also encompass host defense against disseminated bacilli. The fact that mucosal immunization does not require needles and syringes can be a highly desirable attribute in some situations. The present invention can be used to deliver vaccines to mucosal surfaces and to deliver vaccines without the use of needles

Of the various mucosal routes of vaccination, intranasal vaccination has attracted the most attention, both because of the ease of administration and because of many demonstrations of intranasal vaccine efficacy (Kyd et al., Vaccine. 2001; 19(17-19):2527-33; Davis, Adv Drug Deliv Rev. 2001; 51(1-3):21-42; Illum and Davis, Adv Drug Deliv Rev. 2001; 51(1-3):1-3; and Kyd et al., Vaccine. 2001; 19(17-19):2527-33). Many intranasal vaccines for veterinary applications are already on the market. To date, the only human intranasal vaccine in clinical use (at least in the U.S.) is FluMist® intranasal flu vaccine, but intranasal vaccines for other human diseases are in various stages of development, including vaccines incorporating malarial, schistosomal, or HIV antigens as intranasal vaccines against those diseases.

In light of the advantages of intranasal vaccination, it is surprising that so little of the global research on TB vaccination strategies has been directed towards exploiting this route of immunization. Three prominent TB vaccine development groups—a group at McMaster University, Adrian Hill's group at Oxford, and Juraj Ivanyi's group at Kings College London—have published efficacy studies on intranasally administered BCG (Falero-Diaz et al., Vaccine. 2000; 18(28):3223-9; Chen et al., Infect Immun. 2004; 72(1):238-46; Goonetilleke et al., J Immunol. 2003; 171(3):1602-9). Several investigators have also published efficacy studies using attenuated strains of vaccinia virus and adenovirus, each genetically engineered to express TB antigen 85A (Goonetilleke et al., J Immunol. 2003; 171(3):1602-9; and Wang et al., J Immunol. 2004; 173(10):6357-65). Intranasal vaccination with each of these vectors has demonstrated potent induction of pulmonary immune responses in addition to systemic immunity, and protective efficacy against subsequent aerosol challenge with virulent M. tuberculosis.

Studies utilizing each of these live attenuated organisms have confirmed that intranasal vaccination is a highly promising approach to inducing protection against TB, and have additionally elucidated some of the mechanisms of immunity induced. These include recruitment, prolonged retention, and functional activation of pulmonary T cells (Chen et al., Infect Immun. 2004; 72(1):238-46; Goonetilleke et al., J Immunol. 2003; 171(3):1602-9; Wang et al., J Immunol. 2004; 173(10):6357-65; Copenhaver et al., Infect Immun. 2004; 72(12):7084-95; Dieli et al., J Immunol. 2003; 170(1):463-9; Santosuosso et al., J Immunol. 2005; 174(12):7986-94; and Lyadova et al., Clin Exp Immunol. 2001; 126(2):274-9), induction of delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) to the TB skin test reagent PPD (Nuermberger et al., Infect Immun. 2004; 72(2); 1065-71), enhancement of the ability of alveolar macrophages to kill intracellular M. tuberculosis (Drandarska et al., Int Immunopharmacol. 2005; 5(4):795-803), and recruitment of dendritic cells to the lungs (Reljic et al., Tuberculosis (Edinb). 2005; 85(1-2):81-8; Lagranderie et al., Immunology. 2003; 108(3):352-64), where they direct polarization of T cells towards the Th1 phenotype (Lagranderie et al., Immunology. 2003; 108(3):352-64). Thus a growing body of evidence indicates that intranasal vaccination with live attenuated organisms is a promising approach to vaccination against tuberculosis. In the larger context of research on possible TB vaccines, however, it is appropriate to say that our studies will be among a relatively few that have involved intranasal immunization with a candidate TB vaccine. Even fewer studies have directly compared the same vaccine preparation given either intranasally or by a systemic route. Our studies, therefore, will advance scientific understanding in an important area of research, as well as possibly leading to a needle-free TB vaccine.

The HPLC lipid analysis “signature” of M. tuberculosis is a single cluster of eight mycolic acid peaks (Butler and Guthertz, Clin Microbiol Rev. 2001; 14(4):704-26). The M. shottsii chromatogram has a similar set of eight mycolic acid peaks that elute slightly faster than those of M. tuberculosis, indicating that the mycolic acids are slightly shorter and more polar than those of M. tuberculosis (Rhodes et al., Emerg Infect Dis. 2001; 7(5):896-9). Although the precise molecular requirements for lipid antigen presentation through the group 1 CD1 pathway are still being elucidated, it is believed that lipid antigen presentation is more flexible (less constrained) than peptide epitope presentation. For example, the CD1B antigen binding groove consists of four “pockets”. The length of the alkyl chain of a lipid antigen determines how many pockets in the antigen binding groove are occupied by the lipid antigen, but lipids of varying chain lengths are effectively presented by CD1B molecules (Brigl and Brenner, Annu Rev Immunol. 2004; 22:817-90). Therefore it is very reasonable to expect that the slight differences between the lipids of M. shottsii and those of M. tuberculosis would be inconsequential in terms of antigen presentation.

The vaccines of the present invention may be administered intranasally. Most people prefer administration as a nasal spray over injection by a needle, both for themselves and for their children. Additionally, the WHO has set the development of “needle-less” vaccines as a global public health goal, because of the risk of inadvertently spreading blood-borne diseases through the misuse of needles. Furthermore, intranasal vaccination induces mucosal immunity as well as systemic immunity, whereas injections only induce systemic immunity. Since almost all pathogens infect the body through mucosal surfaces, the respiratory tract, the gut, or genital tissues, mucosally administered vaccines have more opportunity to stop infectious diseases at the point of entry.

The vaccines of the present invention have the advantages of live vaccines, yet will be very safe because of their inability to survive at mammalian core body temperatures. Of the various forms of vaccines, usually classified as live whole cell, dead whole cell, subunit, or DNA-based, it is well recognized that live whole cell vaccines induce the most durable protection.

The vaccines of the present invention are expected to induce T-cell-mediated immunity as well as antibodies. This ability to induce both types of immunity is a feature of immune responses to mycobacteria in general. Almost all vaccines in the marketplace today only induce antibodies, but there are many infectious diseases caused by pathogens that can only be eliminated from the body by T-cell-mediated immunity.

Although cold-adapted viruses may seem similar to the naturally cold-adapted M. shottsii vaccine platform of the present invention, the present invention has advantages. For example, the genome of M. shottsii is immensely larger than those of a virus (thousands of genes versus just a few genes). When viruses are used as vectors to present antigens from other pathogens to the immune system, only one or two foreign genes can be packaged into the viral shell. In contrast, numerous foreign genes can be inserted into M. shottsii. For example, one could create an M. shottsii-based vaccine to protect against every known human sexually-transmitted disease. Or, a vaccine containing antigens from the agents of tuberculosis, malaria, and HIV may be constructed in M. shottsii.

The present invention is illustrated by the following examples. It is to be understood that the particular examples, materials, amounts, and procedures are to be interpreted broadly in accordance with the scope and spirit of the invention as set forth herein.

EXAMPLES Example 1

Mycobacterium shottsii, as a vaccine for tuberculosis This example will assess the potential of M. shottsii as a vaccine for tuberculosis (TB). It includes three Aims. Aim One is an evaluation of safety by comparing M. shottsii to BCG in severely immunodeficient SCID mice. SCID mice are a model system that is increasingly being accepted by TB vaccine developers and regulatory authorities as a verification of attenuation that may predict the safety of a live vaccine in immunocompromised human subjects. It is expected that M. shottsii will be equally or more attenuated than BCG in the SCID mouse model.

Aim Two includes additional studies of vaccine safety and immunogenicity, performed in immunocompetent, outbred Hartley strain guinea pigs. The experiments will compare graded doses of M. shottsii to graded doses of BCG bacilli (a live attenuated vaccine derived from M. bovis), either applied by the intranasal route of administration or delivered as an intradermal injection. Guinea pigs will be vaccinated, but not challenged. Three important aspects of evaluating the safety of M. shottsii as a live vaccine will be evaluated. One, pathogenicity and vaccine reactogenicity will be assessed by clinical measurements, and by postmortem histological studies of tissues both at the site of inoculation and in potential sites of dissemination such as the lungs and spleen. Two, microbial persistence, both locally and at potential sites of dissemination, will be ascertained by culture of recoverable organisms. And, three, possible “reversion to virulence” (or as more accurately stated for a naturally attenuated strain like M. shottsii—in vivo acquisition of increased virulence) over a period of time in a mammalian host will be assessed by determining if recovered M. shottsii bacilli have become any more thermotolerant than the original inoculum.

Aim Three includes vaccine efficacy studies utilizing the well established guinea pig model of TB. Guinea pigs (M. shottsii vaccinated, BCG vaccinated, and unvaccinated) will be observation for up to 300 days following inoculation. Animals will be sacrificed for cultures and pathology studies at 300 days post-inoculation and sooner if any of the guinea pigs display signs of illness.

The temperature sensitivity of M. shottsii will keep it confined to the superficial tissues of the upper respiratory passages, just as is true for cold-adapted influenza strains. To test this, the studies under Aims One and Two will not only carefully test for evidence that M. shottsii may have disseminated to warmer tissues, but will also test both nasal and other tissues for evidence of bacilli that may have adapted in vivo for any less temperature restriction than was characteristic of the initial inoculum.

Experimental Design and Methods

Virulent M. tuberculosis used for challenge will be H37Rv, maintained in the laboratory. Fresh cultures of the H37Rv type strain may be obtained from the ATCC. The BCG vaccine comparator strain will be BCG Pasteur.

Fresh clones of M. shottsii will be isolated from Chesapeake Bay striped bass, taking care to employ only certified BSE-free materials. A Master Seed Bank and a Working Seed Bank will be established. This is the standard, FDA recommended, procedure for preventing genetic variations from creeping into a vaccine strain. All work with the M. shottsii vaccine strain will be conducted under Good Laboratory Practice (GLP) guidelines. The temperature growth restriction will be determined for the vaccine isolate. All of the components needed to establish a Master and Working Seed banks are commercially available with the “BSE-free” designation. Isolates of will be verified by species-specific PCR testing and HPLC lipid analysis.

Aim One

The evaluation of the safety of M. shottsii will be a comparison of M. shottsii to BCG in highly immunodeficient SCID mice. SCID mice, which lack both T cells and B cells, have proven to be a useful and sensitive model for comparing the virulence of different mycobacterial strains or species (Sambandamurthy et al., Nat Med. 2002; 8(10): 1171-4). Important evidence in support of the feasibility of proceeding with further assessment of the vaccine potential of M. shottsii will be a finding that M. shottsii is no more virulent than BCG in the SCID mouse. Furthermore, postmortem studies will allow a comparison of tissue pathogenicity caused by M. shottsii to that caused by BCG, comparative persistence of the two mycobacterial species, and, if any viable M. shottsii are recovered, the possibility that during persistence in a mammalian host, M. shottsii might have become less temperature-restricted in its growth than was the original vaccine strain.

Published protocols that were used in demonstrating the attenuation of the double auxotrophic mutant of M. tuberculosis in SCID mice (Sampson et al., Infect Immun. 2004; 72(5):3031-7) will be used. Three groups of eight JAX® B6.CB17-Prkdc SCID mice will be intravenously injected with either PBS (control) or 3×10⁴ log-phase bacilli of either BCG or M. shottsii. The read-out of this assay is termed survival time, but the mice will be monitored for signs of illness, and will be euthanized as directed by veterinary staff blinded to the treatment groups. It is expected that the BCG injected mice will succumb between 8 and 11 weeks after inoculation. The expected survival time of SCID mice injected with M. shottsii is unknown. As BCG and M. shottsii injected mice succumb or are euthanized for declining health tissues from the lungs, liver, spleens, and nasal passages of the mice will be examined for gross pathology and micropathology if warranted and cultured for growth of persisting mycobacteria, both on agar plates and in broth (which is not quantitative, but is considered to be more sensitive if the number of inoculated mycobacteria is low). For BCG, the incubation temperature will be 37°; for M. shottsii incubation at 23°, 26°, 29° and 37° will probe for any change in temperature growth restriction compared to the vaccine innoculum.

Data analysis and interpretation. Group sizes are powered for comparison of survival curves, which will be compared using the logrank test (Bland and Altman, “Statistics Notes: The logrank test,” BMJ May 1, 2004; Vol. 328 at bmj.com; and Bland and Altman, “Statistics Notes: Survival probabilities (the Kaplan-Meier method),” BMJ 1998; 317: 1572-1580 at bmj.com). The first logrank analysis will be conducted when the BCG injected mice have succumbed, and will be used to test the null hypothesis that there is no difference between the survival curves of the BCG and M. shottsii injected mice. Note that the logrank test, like the Kaplan-Meier method, is appropriate to use when some individuals have not yet died (in statistical terms, some survival times are censored). No significant difference between the BCG and M. shottsii survival curves means that M. shottsii is as attenuated as BCG in this model. If the M. shottsii injected mice survive longer than the BCG injected mice, and the survival curves are clearly different for this reason, this will mean that M. shottsii is more attenuated than BCG in this model. M. shottsii and PBS injected groups will be followed for as long as the M. shottsii injected mice survive, up to a maximum of 270 days post-injection. A final statistical analysis of all three groups, using the logrank test, will be performed. If the survival curve of the M. shottsii mice is not statistically different from the PBS control group, this will mean that the M. shottsii vaccine is avirulent in a severely immunodeficient mouse model that is increasingly being accepted as predictive of safety in immunocompromised people.

Tissue pathology will not be quantified, but any evidence of tissue pathology that was markedly greater in the M. shottsii injected SCID mice than in the BCG injected mice would be noted. Numbers of recovered CFU from the organs of mice in the BCG and M. shottsii groups will be compared by the Student t test.

Survival curves of the three groups of SCID mice will be compared. An expected finding is that M. shottsii is as attenuated as, or more attenuated than, BCG in this animal model.

Aim Two

Additional studies of vaccine safety and immunogenicity will be performed in immunocompetent outbred Hartley strain guinea pigs. These studies are designed, in part, in consideration of recent statements by regulatory officials and knowledgeable vaccine developers concerning the preclinical animal studies that are desirable or necessary before a live TB vaccine candidate would be approved for entry into human trials. The objectives include:

Assess tissue pathology, including that due to the immune response induced by a vaccine;

Assess microbial persistence in an immunocompetent animal model;

Determine whether M. shottsii organisms that may be recovered after a period of in vivo persistence may have adapted by becoming less temperature-restricted in their growth;

Assess whether M. shottsii vaccination would induce cutaneous DTH responses to PPD (Although there could be a small public health disadvantage if vaccination with M. shottsii were found to cause positive PPD skin tests in vaccinated people, this is not considered to be an obstacle for an effective TB vaccine. BCG vaccination causes positive PPD responses that persist for decades.

Dose-related positive PPD reactions in the guinea pigs could form the basis of a potency test that is a requirement for sound product development. For, example, induction of PPD reactions in guinea pigs is the potency test for manufacture of BCG vaccines); and

Attempt to identify a measure of immunogenicity by quantifying guinea pig antibodies to native TB proteins in the antigen 85 complex, with the objective being development of a potency test.

Experimental groups. Four Charles River Laboratory Hartley strain guinea pigs, weighing 201-250 grams each, randomized into each of eights groups will be immunized as outlined in Table 1. A ninth group will be unimmunized, and will serve as a healthy control group.

TABLE 1 Intranasal Inoculum Intradermal Inoculum M. shottsii 10⁵ 10⁶ 10⁵ 10⁶ BCG 10⁵ 10⁶ 10⁵ 10⁶

Intranasal administration. BCG or M. shottsii will be administered to the guinea pigs as drops. The volume of liquid vaccine administered may be critical in determining the distribution of the liquid along the respiratory and gastrointestinal tracts (Pasetti et al., J Virol. 2003; 77(9):5209-17). It has been determined that the nasal spray administration of FluMist results in distribution of the vaccine droplets in the nasopharynx (Abramson, Pediatr Infect Dis J 1999; 18(12):1103-4; and Cox et al., Scand J Immunol. 2004; 59(1):1-15). As anyone who has used a nasal spay has noticed, any excess spray that trickles down the throat of awake humans is swallowed. In anesthetized animals, intranasally administered liquid can drain into the lungs as well as into the gastrointestinal tract. Straszek and Pedersen measured nasal cavity dimensions in guinea pigs, and estimated that the volume of the nasal cavity in guinea pigs is the equivalent of 100 to 200 microliters per side (Straszek and Pedersen, J Appl Physiol. 2004; 96(6):2109-14). Intranasal vaccines will be administered to lightly anesthetized guinea pigs in a volume of 25 microliters per side, applied just inside the external nares while the guinea pigs are in a dorsal recumbent position (for no more than 5 minutes), in order to optimize the retention of the vaccine in the nasopharynx as would be characteristic of a vaccine administered to humans by a device such as that used for FluMist®.

Intradermal administration. Guinea pigs in the Aim Two studies will be vaccinated by a systemic route, for comparison to vaccination by the intranasal route, and to lay the groundwork for selection of a prime-boost protocol in the vaccine efficacy studies in Aim Three. Intramuscular, intraperitoneal, subcutaneous, and intradermal vaccinations are all systemic routes of immunization. An intradermal route of vaccination will be used for several reasons.

The WHO recommends that BCG vaccination be given intradermally, and most countries administer BCG by this route. Interestingly, a recent comparative trial has found that intradermal BCG vaccination (with a needle) is more effective than percutaneous vaccination (with a specialized vaccine applicator involving multiple tines) (Hussey et al., Immunology. 2002; 105(3):314-24). The reason for the difference in efficacy may have to do with the differences in the dendritic cells that take up the antigens. In the epidermis, where intradermal vaccination is supposed to deliver the antigens, Langerhans cells are the resident dendritic cells. Slightly deeper in the skin, in the dermis, the resident dendritic cells are interstitial dendritic cells (Liu, Cell. 2001; 106:259-262). Percutaneous vaccination with the tine device probably deposits some of the antigens into this layer of the skin. Exciting studies of the lipid antigen presenting capacity of Langerhans cells have informed the decision to use intradermal vaccination in the Aim Two studies. The specific isoforms of group 1 CD1 antigen presenting molecules appear to be different on Langerhans cells than on interstitial dendritic cells (Moody and Porcelli, Nat Rev Immunol. 2003; 3(1):11-22). Furthermore, two recent studies have shown that epidermal Langerhans cells efficiently present mycobacterial lipids to T cells (Hunger et al., J Clin Invest. 2004; 113(5):701-8; and Pena-Cruz et al., J Invest Dermatol. 2003; 121(3):517-21).

Clinical observations and scoring. All guinea pigs, regardless of the route by which they are vaccinated, will be monitored daily during the first week for increased body temperature or evident malaise. All guinea pigs will be weighed weekly to detect anorexia or other adverse reactions that can affect weight. Intradermally injected guinea pigs will have their injection sites visually inspected, at first daily and then weekly. A scoring system for monitoring upper respiratory vaccine reactogenicity will be used to derive a quantitative score for each intranasally vaccinated guinea pig. The elements of the scoring system will be: visible inflammation of the external nares (0-3); nasal discharge characterized as none, slight serous, marked serous, slight mucopurulent, or marked mucopurulent (0-4) (Patel, J S Afr Vet Assoc. 2004; 75(3):137-46); and respiratory rate, which has been validated as an index that reflects nasal blockage of guinea pigs (0-3) (Zhao et al., Rhinology. 2005; 43(1):47-54).

Measures of immunogenicity will include measurements of cutaneous DTH to PPD and antibody responses to antigen 85 complex. For measurements of cutaneous DTH to PPD, all guinea pigs will be given an intradermal injection of PPD 39 days after vaccination (i.e. three days before the six week sacrifice point) using a standardized protocol (Sampson et al., Infect Immun. 2004; 72(5):3031-7) and induration at the site will be measured 24, 48, and 72 hours later. The 39 day time point may be a little too soon for a cutaneous DTH reaction to develop. Thus, the study is designed with three out of four animals in each experimental group being sacrificed at six weeks largely to increase our chances of recovering persistent mycobacteria before an increasing cell-mediated immune response might eliminate the organisms. The one remaining guinea pig in each experimental group can be retested at nine weeks post-inoculation, as an attempt to overcome this pitfall, but each intradermal injection of PPD will boost immunity to the antigens in PPD, and thus may alter immune-mediated pathology.

Antibody responses to the antigen 85 complex (85A, 85B, and 85C) will be measured six weeks after vaccination, three animals in each experimental group will be euthanized for pathology and microbiology studies, and at that time blood will be drawn by cardiac puncture. Serum will be banked for further studies in Phase II, and a portion will be tested in an ELISA for antibodies to proteins of the antigen 85 complex. Native (i.e. not recombinant) antigen 85 complex protein mixture will be obtained from the NIAID-sponsored TB Resources program at Colorado State University. The antigen 85 complex is believed to be encoded by highly homologous genes in all mycobacterial species, so this is a reasonable choice of an immunogenicity measure that could be used as a potency assay. Measurement of interferon-gamma producing ELISPOTS by mice immunized with the Oxford group's MVA85A vaccine is used as their vaccine potency test. Note that potency assays vary by product and may evolve as a product moves through preclinical and clinical studies (NIH/FDA TB Vaccine Workshop). Also, note especially that neither of our measures of immunogenicity are thought to be correlates of vaccine protection.

Postmortem studies. Three guinea pigs in each experimental group will be sacrificed six weeks after vaccination, while one animal in each group will be maintained for 270 days for evidence of late reactivation of disease, longer term persistence, and testing of the temperature restriction of any persisting M. shottsii that are recovered.

After euthanasia, tissues including lungs, liver, spleens, nasal tissues and punch biopsies of intradermal injection sites will be harvested and allocated to different experiments. Gross pathology and microhistopathology studies will be conducted by a veterinary pathologist using methods and a scoring system that have been developed specifically for determination of mycobacteria-related pathology (Lasco et al., Tuberculosis (Edinb). 2005; 85(4):245-58). These methods will also be applied to the virulent TB challenged guinea pigs in Aim Three, as described below.

Microbiological studies will include culture of tissue homogenates for CFUs, including culture of homogenates from M. shottsii vaccinated mice at incubation temperatures of 23°, 26°, 29°, and 37° C., to assess any loss of temperature restriction. If some persistence of M. shottsii is found in the nasal tissues of mice, but not elsewhere, this will confirm that the natural cold-adaptation of M. shottsii will keep it confined to the upper respiratory tract, just as is true for cold-adapted live flu vaccine. Furthermore, some persistence of a live vaccine is a good thing, as it helps in inducing a strong and durable immune response.

Data analysis and interpretation. CFUs are, of course, quantitative, as are induration sizes of PPD reactions and ELISA optical density measures. A scoring system will be used for clinical observations and pathology studies to yield a quantitative measurement. Each of these measures will be compared by the Student t test for significant differences between groups.

Aim Three

Preliminary efficacy studies comparing M. shottsii to BCG in guinea pig model of TB. Aim Three will demonstrate that vaccination with M. shottsii has efficacy in the guinea pig model of TB. Based upon the results of the Aim Two, a single inoculum dose will be selected for intranasal immunization and a single dose for intradermal immunization. Guinea pigs will be aerosol challenged with virulent M. tuberculosis seven weeks after vaccination (or after the last vaccination in the case of the prime-boost regimens in trial two, described below. Experimental group sizes of five animals per group are based upon Mary Hondalus' recently published studies in which that group size yielded statistically significant differences between vaccinated and control guinea pigs for the outcome measure of CFUs of the M. tuberculosis challenge strain, which will also be our primary outcome measure. Two efficacy trials will be conducted sequentially, mainly because of the capacity limit of the Madison aerosol exposure chamber, but also so that we can factor the results of the first trial into the design of the second trial.

The first trial will compare the protective efficacy of intradermally administered BCG, intradermally administered M. shottsii, intranasally administered BCG, intranasally administered M. shottsii, and unvaccinated controls. One additional unvaccinated animal will be sacrificed shortly after the aerosol exposure to confirm that approximately 20 CFUs of M. tuberculosis H37Rv were deposited into the lungs during the aerosol exposure.

The second trial will compare four prime-boost regimens, with eight weeks elapsing between the prime and the boost. Groups of ten guinea pigs will be intradermally vaccinated with either BCG or M. shottsii, and then divided into groups of five, which will be boosted intranasally with either BCG or M. shottsii. This trial design has been selected, in part, because it models one way that a new TB vaccine may be used. As recently published, in a report of a successful prime-boost regimen in the guinea pig TB model, one approach to improving resistance to TB is to use a new vaccine to boost immunity in children who have already been vaccinated at birth with BCG (Horwitz et al., Infect Immun. 2005; 73(8):4676-83). The great majority of children (and a majority of adults) living in the areas of the world with high TB prevalent are vaccinated at birth with BCG as per WHO recommendations, and it may be difficult to even conduct Phase 3 clinical trials of a new vaccine if participation requires withholding BCG vaccination.

Guinea pigs will be sacrificed five weeks after challenge. CFU of M. tuberculosis will be cultured by standard methods. Pathology will be interpreted by a veterinary pathologist and scored by a system developed specifically for the guinea pig model of TB (Lasco et al., Tuberculosis (Edinb). 2005; 85(4):245-58). Guinea pigs will be weighed weekly.

Data analysis and interpretation: The Aim Three studies are powered for comparison of log CFU in the lungs and spleens of vaccinated groups to the non-vaccinated (control) group, determined by one-way analysis of variance. It is expected that at least some vaccine regimens show that M. shottsii has statistically significant vaccine efficacy, as compared to the control group. It is very unlikely that we could find statistically significant superiority of M. shottsii over BCG in these trials, because demonstrating superiority over BCG of the very best candidate vaccines tested in the guinea pig model has required group sizes on the order of 24 guinea pigs per group. ANOVA methods will also be used to compare mean weight gains/losses.

Example 2 Toxicity and Immune-Reactivity of M. Shottsii Via Intranasal Infection

This example demonstrates that intranasal inoculation with a large dose of M. shottsii produces minimal toxicity in the nasal cavities (similar to or less than M. bovis BCG) and none in the lungs or other examined organs (less than M. bovis BCG). Of equal or greater importance is the observed ability by M. shottsii to induce a similar immune response in the NALT as compared to that of M. bovis BCG. Further studies will examine humoral and cellular immune responses in the guinea pig and will demonstrate as good as or superior to M. bovis BCG with less toxicity.

Detailed histopathology studies were conducted, examining the nasal associated lymphoid tissue (NALT) and the lungs of mice that were intranasally vaccinated with either 10⁷ M. shottsii or 10⁷ BCG organisms. In order to assess the toxicity and initial immune-reactivity of M. shottsii via intranasal infection, three groups of five C57BL/6 mice were inoculated with PBS, 10⁷ CFU M. bovis BCG, strain Pasteur or 10⁷ M. shottsii and were assessed 7- and 21-days post-challenge. At necropsy, gross examination of mouse carcasses found no significant lesions in nasal cavities, trachea, lungs and other organs in all groups of mice at the 7 and 21 days post-infection time points. Whole head and lungs were dissected out from the body and placed in 10% buffered formalin for overnight fixation. Mice heads were then decalcified overnight and serially sectioned between the 3rd and 4th palatine ridges to expose the Nasal Associated Lymphoid Tissues (NALT). Serial sections were placed in tissue cassettes and stained with hematoxylin and eosin stain (H&E).

Representative histological appearance of NALT from C57BL/6 mice after 21-day infection by intranasal challenge with PBS control, 10⁷ CFU of M. bovis BCG, or M. shottsii showed moderate expansion of lymphoid follicles of NALT is seen in BCG and M. shottsii-infected mice. NALT in these inoculated groups display increased numbers of lymphoblasts and macrophages indicating immune-reactivity to the given antigen. In some sections, there is increased density of lymphatics/capillaries within hyperplastic lymphoid follicles. Comparatively, there is no expansion of NALT in control group of mice. Lymphoid follicles within control group have relatively higher numbers of small lymphocytes interspersed with fewer macrophages and lymphoblasts.

Histologically, there is a gradual expansion of lymphoid follicles in the NALT from 7- to 21-day post-infection in mice inoculated with M. bovis BCG and M. shottsii. Additionally, the NALT in both inoculated groups display increased numbers of lymphoblasts and macrophages indicating immune-reactivity against mycobacterial antigens. In some sections, there is increased density of lymphatics/capillaries within hyperplastic lymphoid follicles. Comparatively, there is no expansion of NALT in control groups of mice at either time point. Lymphoid follicles within the control group have relatively higher numbers of small lymphocytes interspersed with fewer macrophages and lymphoblasts. The lung tissues from the three groups of mice sacrificed at both time points showed no grossly visible lesions. Lung tissues from M. bovis BCG inoculated mice after 21-day infections showed microscopic granulomas, often located in sub-pleural areas. Lungs of mice inoculated with M. shottsii or sterile PBS at the same time point showed no evidence of granulomas in the parenchyma.

These studies indicate that intranasal inoculation with a large dose of M. shottsii produces minimal toxicity in the nasal cavities (similar to or less than M. bovis BCG) and none in the lungs or other examined organs (less than M. bovis BCG). Of equal or greater importance is the observed ability by M. shottsii to induce a similar immune response in the NALT as compared to that of M. bovis BCG.

Example 3 Expression of a Heterologous Protein in M. shottsii

The green fluorescent protein (GFP) from the jellyfish Aequorea victoria is a frequently used reporter protein for monitoring gene expression and protein localization in a variety of cells and organisms. See for example, the review by R. Tsien, Ann. Rev. Biochem 1998; 67:509-544.

Using a mycobacteriophage L5 promoter to drive expression of the gene for green fluorescent protein (GFP), M. shottsii has been genetically engineered to express GFP. GFP-expressing M. shottsii were used to infect a carp macrophage cell line (ATCC-CCL30), in which the mycobacteria can be observed to be intracellular. This suggests that M. shottsii, like other mycobacteria of the M. tuberculosis complex, is a facultative intracellular microbe. If M. shottsii bacilli also persist or grow intracellularly in mammalian cells, this characteristic would bode well for the ability of an M. shottsii vaccine to induce Th1 immunity, which is believed to be important for an effective immune response to M. tuberculosis. The intracellular growth of M. shottsii in mammalian cells is difficult to investigate, because M. shottsii will not grow at 37° C., and mammalian cells will not generally grow at cooler temperatures. Future studies will explore the ability of human nasopharyngeal epithelial cells to grow at a temperature that would be permissive for M. shottsii, and these studies will be of great interest to us because of their relevance to the use of M. shottsii as an intranasal vaccine.

Example 4 Immune Response in Animals Immunized with M. shottsii Expressing a Transgene

To determine the induction of an immune response to an antigen or immunogen provided by immunization with a transgenic M. shottsii vector, groups of BALB/c mice will be vaccinated intranasally with either:

-   -   saline only, as a negative control group;     -   one dose (10⁷ organisms) of GFP-expressing M. shottsii;     -   two doses of GFP-M. shottsii, two weeks apart; or     -   three doses of GFP-M. shottsii, at two week intervals.

Three weeks after the last vaccination, the mice will be humanely sacrificed and their serum collected for detection of antibodies.

By Western blot analysis, mixtures of proteins will be separated by electrophoresis on polyacrylamide gels. Gels will contain either a sonicate of the M. shottsii expressing GFP or purified GFP alone. Proteins from the gels will be transferred onto nitrocellulose, incubated with serum from each mouse. Bound antibodies will be detected with enzyme-labeled secondary antibodies.

Example 5 Mycobacterium shottsii Based HIV Vaccines

This example will develop M. shottsii as a transgenic vaccine vector. M. shottsii is a member of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex, a phylogenetic grouping of genetically similar mycobacterial species that includes M. tuberculosis, M. bovis, and the live vaccine BCG, which is an attenuated strain of M bovis.

Recombinant BCG vaccines expressing various HIV antigens have shown promising results in small animal and nonhuman primate models, producing strong HIV antigen-specific T cell responses, neutralizing antibody responses, and exceptionally durable immunity.

While BCG is a powerful vaccine vector, it has become increasingly evident that BCG vaccination of immunocompromised individuals can result in disseminated BCG infections and fatal disease. Thus safety concerns may make BCG-HIV vaccines impractical, especially in settings where it may not be feasible to identify and withhold vaccine from all immunocompromised individuals. Furthermore, BCG vaccine bacilli persist in vaccinated human subjects for years, even decades, and there are documented examples of disseminated BCG disease developing long after vaccination, when an individual's immune system became compromised.

Example 3 will show that M. shottsii, like BCG, can be genetically engineered to express foreign genes and, thus, serve as a vaccine vector. Safety issues of BCG-based HIV vaccines can be overcome by exploiting a unique property of M. shottsii. Although phylogenetically closely related to BCG, M. shottsii differs from all other members of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex in one dramatic way. M. shottsii is naturally cold-adapted, growing best at around 22-26° C., and not at all at 37° C., allowing it to replicate and persist only in the superficial upper respiratory tissues of vaccinated mammals.

In this example, HIV gag p24 protein expression will be optimized from mycobacterial promoters and secretion signals in M. shottsii. M. shottsii will be engineered to abundantly express HIV proteins that have been codon-optimized for expression in mycobacteria. This example will compare the relative safety of M. shottsii to the live BCG vaccine administered intranasally to immunocompromised (SCID) mice. The natural temperature-sensitivity of M. shottsii will restrict replication to the upper respiratory tissues and it will not persist or grow in the deeper tissues as BCG does. This example will also determine the immunogenicity of selected M. shottsii gag p24-expressing strains. Intranasal vaccination will induce p24 antigen-specific antibodies and cell-mediated immune responses both systemically and in distant mucosal tissues of the genital and intestinal tracts.

A vaccine to prevent HIV infection and disease offers the best hope of bringing the worldwide HIV epidemic under control. The most essential features of an HIV vaccine are that it be effective, safe, and inexpensive. Based upon the discussion below, M. shottsii vectored HIV vaccine will fulfill these criteria. While the correlates of protection for an HIV preventative vaccine are not yet fully elucidated, at least three points are likely to hold true. One, both cell-mediated immunity and neutralizing antibodies are likely to contribute to host defense. Two, the great majority of HIV infections are acquired by the vaginal or rectal routes, a preventative vaccine should induce effective immunity in these mucosal sites as well as systemically. And, three, immunity must be induced to multiple epitopes, and preferably to multiple antigens, to protect against the many strains of HIV and to reduce the risk that a strain can escape immunity by acquiring mutations in key epitopes.

Live attenuated vaccines have traditionally been found to confer longer lasting immunity, and to require fewer immunizations than nonliving vaccines. These attributes make them attractive vaccine candidates for HIV, which threatens people throughout their life spans and is especially prevalent in regions of the world where lengthy immunization regimens are difficult to maintain. Among the live vaccine vectors that have been considered as delivery vehicles for HIV antigens, BCG was proposed as a promising candidate early on, because of several attractive features. Among the most promising features of BCG are its ability to be engineered to express very high levels of foreign proteins, its intrinsic powerful adjuvanticity, its ability to induce cell-mediated immunity that is biased towards Th1, its ability to be administered mucosally and to induce mucosal immunity, its 80 year history of use as a human vaccine, and the fact that it can be manufactured very inexpensively.

A wide variety of systems for the introduction and expression of foreign genes in BCG and other mycobacteria have been developed. Two general classes of vectors exist—shuttle plasmid vectors that replicate extrachromosomally and that can carry 20 kb or more of foreign genetic material, and shuttle phasmid vectors that stably integrate into the mycobacterial chromosome along with much larger amounts of foreign DNA. Thus mycobacterial vaccines can express many foreign antigens, unlike viral vaccine vectors that have a more limited capacity. For example, nonhuman primate trials are now underway with a recombinant BCG expressing antigens from HIV, malaria, and M. tuberculosis, which is designed to be a three-in-one vaccine. Similarly, multiple HIV antigenic sequences could be combined in a single mycobacterial-vectored vaccine—a recommended polyvalent approach to improving the breadth of HIV protection. By selecting various leader sequences or even by inserting foreign DNA into the sequence of a mycobacterial gene, it is possible to direct the expressed protein to the cell membrane, or to remain in the cytoplasm, or to be exported from the cell. Furthermore, a large number of native or foreign promoters are available to drive the expression of foreign genes, and production of foreign protein to levels of 10% of the total amount of cell protein is not unusual. Use of a strong promoter, choice of leader sequences, and codon optimization have been shown to act synergistically to increase HIV vaccine immunogenicity.

The adjuvanticity of BCG and other mycobacteria in the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex can largely be attributed to components of the mycobacterial cell wall, and especially to trehalose dimycolate, also known as cord factor. Cell wall fractions of M. tuberculosis are the key ingredient that provides the immune stimulating property of Complete Freunds Adjuvant. A major glycolipid component of the cell wall of all pathogenic mycobacteria is trehalose dimycolate, which has been shown to activate innate immune mechanisms believed to account for adjuvanticity. Synthetic analogs of trehalose dimycolate form the basis of the adjuvant TiterMax®. The cell wall lipid profile of M. shottsii is extraordinarily similar to that of M. tuberculosis (and to a slightly lesser extent to BCG). Further, based on the way it grows in culture, it is likely that M. shottsii produces trehalose dimycolate. Trehalose dimycolate is called cord factor because mycobacteria that produce it tend to bind together in long, winding, rope-like structures. These same characteristic structures have been observed in cultures of M. shottsii. It is reasonable to expect, therefore, that M. shottsii is likely to have the same powerful adjuvant properties as BCG—inducing strong Th1 T cell responses, along with moderate Th2 and antibody responses, and activating innate immunity as well.

It has been clearly established that vaccination through mucosal routes generates both mucosal and systemic immune responses, whereas systemic routes of vaccination usually only generate systemic immunity. Mucosal immunization therefore offers advantages for vaccines against pathogens that invade through mucosal tissues, such as HIV. The ability of mucosal vaccination to also induce systemic immunity means that vaccine efficacy can also encompass host defense against disseminated pathogens. Although BCG vaccine is now given intradermally, it was given orally in past years. Recent experimental evidence, however, has firmly established that BCG can induce mucosal immunity at both local and distant sites when administered intranasally as well. Unfortunately, however, intranasally-administered BCG quickly disseminates to other tissues, even in immunocompetent mice.

Intranasal vaccination has several advantages as a site for mucosal immunization, including the ease of administration and the increasing number of demonstrations of intranasal vaccine efficacy. Most relevant to the prospect of creating effective prophylactic HIV vaccines, however, is that intranasal vaccination may be the best route for inducing immunity in the genital tract. The difficulty of inducing immune responses in genital tissues was recently reviewed in an article entitled “Immunological Uniqueness of the Genital Tract: Challenge for Vaccine Development. Citing many studies that have compared routes of vaccination, the authors conclude that “Intranasal immunization, however, appears to be the most effective route for the generation of genital tract responses in several animal models.” Many additional studies could be added to those cited in the review, which further emphasize the critical point that intranasal vaccination can induce strong and durable antibody and cell-mediated immunity in vaginal, cervical, and rectal tissues, and in the ileal lymph nodes that drain these tissues.

The inability of M. shottsii to grow at 37° has been repeatedly confirmed, both on agar plates and in nutrient broth, even after months of incubation. For example, plating approximately 2×10⁷ M. shottsii yielded no CFU at 37° C. The temperature growth-restriction of M. shottsii has been confirmed and the results are presented in Table 2.

TABLE 2 Temperature tolerance of M. shottsii. 22° 26° 29° 37° Plate cultures +++ +++ + − Broth cultures +++ +++ − − A 0.1 ml aliquot from M. shottii, cultured in Middlebrook 7H9 + OADC + 0.25% Tween 80 to an OD580 = 1.0, was spread onto each of several 7H11 + OADC plates and inoculated into 15-ml culture tubes containing 2 ml of Middlebrook 7H9 + OADC + 0.25% Tween 80. Replicate plate and broth cultures were incubated stationary at multiple temperatures (22°, 26°, 29°, and 37° C.). Liquid cultures were mixed by inversion every 3-4 days. The table represents growth observed after 30 days incubation. (+++ confluent lawn or turbid liquid culture, + minimal growth on plate, − complete absence of growth). Research Design and Methods

Several plasmids bearing HIV gag p24 genetic sequences will be constructed, electroporated into M. shottsii, and the resulting strains will be assessed for the amount of HIV antigen produced. One or more engineered strains that express high levels HIV antigen will be selected as model vaccines. The HIV p24 antigen has been selected as a model antigen because of the ready availability of related reagents, and because codon optimization of the gene to increase production in BCG (or other mycobacteria, which are characterized as having very high GC genomes) has already been accomplished. Vaccines created in this example will demonstrate that a fish mycobacterium can serve as an HIV vaccine vector.

The immunogenicity of a vectored vaccine construct is expected to be positively correlated with the amount of heterologous protein expressed. In addition, there is some evidence that, in the case of intracellular bacteria such as BCG or M. shottsii, having the heterologous protein secreted rather than retained in the bacterial cytoplasm may be favorable for inducing immunity. Two factors that influence the amount of protein produced are the strength of the promoter used, and the extent to which the codons in the foreign DNA have been optimized to match the availability of aminoacyl tRNAs. Both of these factors will be manipulated in constructing the plasmids in Aim One. Many highly immunogenic BCG vaccine constructs have used the hsp60 promoter from M. tuberculosis, and this will be one of two promoters used. The second promoter used is the mycobacteriophage L5 promoter, which has been found to be more powerful than hsp60 at driving expression of a gene, including the gene for green fluorescent protein in the fluorescent strain of M. shottsii of Example 3. Codon optimization for enhanced expression of HIV genes in BCG is a proven strategy for increasing protein production, no doubt because 60.9% of HIV genes have either A or T in the third codon position, while 81.0% of BCG codons have either G or C in the third position. Kanekiyo and associates found that by optimizing the codons in the p24 gene for expression in BCG, the resulting recombinant BCG produced 40 fold more p24 than did a recombinant BGC containing the wild-type p24 gene sequence. This example will compare the wild-type and the codon-optimized sequences in constructing the plasmids. The final parameter that will be examined is insertion of the p24 genes behind signal sequences of proteins known to be secreted by mycobacteria. In this example, the signal sequences for beta-lactamase or for erp (external repetitive protein) will be used. All of the factors have the potential to interact synergistically to optimize antigen expression.

The HIV p24 gene optimized for expression in mycobacteria will either be obtained from Kanekiyo and colleagues (Kanekiyo et al., J Virol. 2005; 79(14):8716-23), or synthesized and assembled by ligation of six overlapping approximately 130-nucleotide (nt) chemically synthesized oligonucleotides that incorporate the codon-optimized base changes. Restriction endonuclease sites will be engineered at the ends of the gene for directional cloning into plasmid vectors. The wild type p24 gene will be obtained by PCR from plasmid p83-2 (available through the NIH AIDS Research and Reference Reagents Program) and analyzed in parallel to the codon-optimized p24 gene. Expression of p24 will be placed downstream of the mycobacteriophage L5 promoter and ribosome binding site by cloning into plasmid pFJS8 and also behind the M. tuberculosis hsp60 heat shock promoter and ribosome binding site by cloning into plasmid pMV261. Both plasmids utilize the same mycobacterial origin of replication. It has been confirmed that this replicon functions in M. shottsii as a derivative of pFJS8 expressing green fluorescent protein yields labeled bacteria. Stability of plasmid-based expression systems in M. shottsii without antibiotic selection (i.e. during mouse infections) is a concern being investigated. M. shottsii expressing green fluorescent protein (GFP) from the mycobacteriophage L5 promoter on plasmid pFJS8, which also encodes the aph kanamycin resistance gene, has been subcultured into medium lacking kanamycin. Bacilli that lose the plasmid will be readily detectable as they will lose fluorescence when examined by fluorescence microscopically. If pFJS8GFP proves unstable without selection for 8 weeks, then the p24 expression studies will instead be constructed in plasmid pMV306, which does not replicate in mycobacteria, but encodes aph, a colE1 origin of replication, and the mycobacteriophage L5 attachment site and integration gene. This vector will be able to integrate into the chromosome of M. shottsii as mycobacteriophage L5 has been shown to integrate into the chromosome of both fast-growing saprophytic M. smegmatis and slow-growing species such as M. bovis BCG and M. tuberculosis at the mycobacteriophage L5 attachment site. M. shottsii was recently electroporated with pMV306 DNA and plated on selective medium. Colony PCR of kanamycin-resistant colonies will be performed to screen for the presence of the L5 integration gene.

To maximize antigen presentation, gag p24 expression will also be placed behind promoter and signal sequences of two known mycobacterial secreted proteins: M. fortuitum β-lactamase and M. tuberculosis Erp. The M. fortuitum blaF promoter and signal sequence have been reported to direct secretion of fusion proteins in M. bovis BCG. As many mycobacteria species are resistant to β-lactam antibiotics, M. shottsii is predicted to encode a secreted β-lactamase; resistance to β-lactam antibiotics is currently being tested. Although the full genome of M. shottsii has not been sequenced, partial sequence of an M. shottsii homolog to the exported repetitive protein, Erp, from M. tuberculosis has been deposited in the NCBI database (accession # AY496288). Therefore, the promoter and signal sequences for both M. fortuitum blaF and M. tuberculosis erp will be obtained by PCR from genomic DNA from each parent strain and inserted into the plasmid pMV306. The wild type and mycobacterial codon-optimized p24 genes will then be cloned in-frame behind the signal peptides of blaF or erp in the resulting plasmids.

In the unlikely event that both the self-replicating and integratable plasmids prove unusable for this study, p24 under control of the various promoters and signal sequences will be cloned onto a suicide vector containing the 361-bp M. shottsii erp region (NCBI accession # AY496288), which can be obtained by PCR from chromosomal DNA. The erp sequence will serve as a region of homology to direct insertion of the suicide plasmid onto the chromosome via homologous recombination methods routinely used in the mycobacterial field.

Quantification of p24 protein produced and selection of model vaccines. Each of the genetically engineered strains created will be grown in broth under standardized conditions, and the number of viable M. shottsii bacilli will be quantified by plating aliquots at intervals to determine colony forming units (CFU). Any recombinant strains that grow substantially slower than the parent strain will be eliminated from consideration at this time as model vaccines. It is interesting to note that very high production of a foreign protein can be toxic to the host cell, so it is possible that some constructs predicted to have maximal production of p24 may turn out to be too impaired for growth to be good vaccine candidates. Strains that are comparable in growth to the parent strain will be grown and sampled at intervals for p24 protein in the culture supernate or in the sonicate of pelleted cells. Quantification of p24 will utilize commercially available ELISA kits. Three of the best p24-producing strains will be selected to take forward into the Aim Three studies as model vaccines, and bank the others for possible future studies.

Following the procedures described in Example 1, the relative safety of M. shottsii to the live BCG vaccine administered intranasally to immunocompromised (SCID) mice. Briefly, for both the survival curve and the tissue dissemination studies, groups of JAX®B6.CB17-Prkdc SCID mice will be intranasally inoculated with either 10⁶ log phase BCG bacilli, 10⁶ log phase M. shottsii or, as the control, phosphate buffered saline (PBS). For the survival curve analysis, there will be eight mice in each group. The read-out of this assay is termed “survival time”

A final statistical analysis of all three groups, using the log rank test, will be performed. If the survival curve of the M. shottsii mice is not statistically different from the PBS control group, this will mean that the M. shottsii vaccine is avirulent in a severely immunodeficient mouse model that is increasingly being accepted as predictive of safety in immunocompromised people.

For the tissue dissemination studies, there will be two mice in each experimental group (BCG, M. shottsii or PBS) at each of six time points, for a total of 36 SCID mice.

The ability of intranasally administered HIV-expressing M. shottsii vaccine to induce mucosal and systemic antigen-specific T cell responses will be measured by quantifying interferon-γ ELISPOTS produced by lymphoid cells from mouse spleen, nasal, genital and intestinal tissues. As a second measure of immunogenicity, serum and vaginal-wash antibodies specific for the p24 antigen will also be measured and isotyped. These studies will demonstrate M. shottsii potential as an HIV vaccine vector.

Three model vaccines will be selected from the engineered M. shottsii strains and used to intranasally immunize female BALB/c mice. Unvaccinated mice will serve as controls. Initially, three vaccination regimens will be compared, vaccinating once, twice or three times. For the vaccination regimens involving more than one dose, there will be an interval of two weeks between each dose. In all cases, the vaccine dose will consist of 10⁶ M. shottsii delivered intranasally in a volume of 10 microliters (μl).

In the first set of experiments, groups of vaccinated mice will be sacrificed at 1 month, 3 months, and 6 months, following the last intranasal dose of vaccine.

Each vaccine/time point group of mice will consist of four mice, which is the minimum needed to obtain the required number of lymphoid cells from the nasal and gut tissues for the ELISPOT assays, as explained below.

For the antibody studies, protocols will closely follow those used by Hong-Yin Wu and colleagues (Wu et al., Infect Immun. 2000; 68(10):5539-45). At each time point when mice are to be euthanized for the immunological studies, they will first be anesthetized for collection of vaginal washes and venous blood from the tail vein. Samples of each type will be pooled from the four mice in each experimental group. Vaginal secretions will be collected by washing three times with 50 μl of PBS. All washes from the mice in each experimental/timepoint group will be pooled and stored at −20° C., so that the ELISA assays from an entire experiment can be run at the same time. Likewise, the 50-100 μl of tail vein blood from each mouse will be pooled, spun to isolate the serum, and stored at −20° C.

Antibodies specific for either p24 or for mycobacterial antigens of the M. shottsii vector will be captured microtiter plates coated with either p24 protein or short term culture filtrate of parental M. shottsii cultures. Detection of antigen-specific IgG and IgA antibodies will utilize labeled anti-mouse immunoglobulins specific for each isotype in the standard ELISA format. In addition, total (as opposed to antigen-specific) IgG and IgA immunoglobulins will be determined in the samples by standard ELISA methods, so that specific antibodies can also be expressed as a proportion of total immunoglobulin in the data analysis.

For IFN-γ-secreting ELISPOT studies, spleen, intestinal intraepithelial lymphocytes, and NALT and nasal passage tissues will be harvested and single cell suspensions will be prepared. Intestinal intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL) will be isolated using previously published methods (Culshaw et al., Infect Immun. 1997; 65(8):3074-9), which yields about 4×10⁶ IEL per mouse. Specific ELISPOT assay will be by the published methods of the same authors (Culshaw et al., Infect Immun. 1997; 65(8):3074-9). NALT and nasal passage tissues will be isolated using previously published methods (Asanuma et al., J Immunol Methods. 1997; 202(2): 123-31) with an expected yield of approximately 3.1×10⁵ NALT lymphoid cells and 6.5×10⁶ NP cells per mouse. HIV p24 interferon-gamma ELISPOT assay will be performed using previously published methods (Kanekiyo et al., J Virol. 2005; 79(14):8716-23). Isolating lymphoid cells, including T cells from the vaginas of mice will be previously published methods. Yield is expected to be low. About 3×10⁵ lymphoid cells were obtained by processing and combining vaginal cells from seven mice (Dupuy et al., J Virol. 1999; 73(11):9063-71). ELISPOT studies of vaginal lymphocytes will be performed. Stimulation of the cell suspensions will include recombinant HIV p24 antigen, short term culture filtrate proteins (representing native antigens on M. shottsii), Con A (nonspecifically stimulates Th1 cells), and media only.

Example 6 Influenza Vaccine

This example will develop a prototype influenza vaccine and demonstrate its safety, immunogenicity, and protective efficacy in a mouse model. The overall goal of this research is to develop a vaccine for pandemic influenza. This example will develop and test a novel influenza prototype vaccine based upon the use of the live, naturally cold-adapted mycobacterial vector M. shottsii. It includes four Aims.

Such an influenza vaccine could overcome obstacles facing vaccine manufacturers. Today's influenza vaccine production technology and manufacturing capacity is insufficient to supply the number of vaccine doses that would be required in a timely manner. The vaccine of the present example would be produced by essentially the same method as BCG vaccine, which is currently manufactured at more than 40 sites worldwide (Fine et al., 1999 “Issues related to the use of BCG in immunization programmes,” available on the world wide web at vaccines.who.int/entity/vaccine_research/documents/en/bcg_vaccines.pdf).

A broader protective immune response would be highly desirable because the pandemic strain would undergo extensive genetic drift as it traveled through the global population, probably in a succession of waves, as did the 1918 pandemic. BCG-vectored vaccines produce strong and durable antibody responses and T cell-mediated immunity, which are believed to contribute to heterosubtypic immunity against antigenically disparate influenza strains (Liang et al., 1994 J Immunol 152: 1653-1661; and Tamura et al., Jpn J Infect Dis 58: 195-207).

Like the cold-adapted live influenza strains in FluMist®, a transgenic M. shottsii vaccine could be administered intranasally, a method that induces mucosal as well as systemic immunity, and that could allow vaccine self-administration in a pandemic.

Aim One will evaluate the safety, reactogenicity, dissemination, and persistence of the new vaccine vector in severely immunocompromised (SCID) mice and in immunologically normal (BALB/c) mice.

Aim Two will develop at least eight different vaccine vector constructs by inserting the influenza hemagglutinin (HA) gene into the chromosomal DNA of the mycobacterial genome, varying the promoters and signal sequences, and optimizing codon usage for synthesis in mycobacteria. The amount and functional activity of HA produced by each construct will be compared, and four constructs will be selected for more detailed study of vaccine immunogenicity.

Aim Three will test the immunogenicity of each of the four vaccine constructs for their ability to induce serum and mucosal antibody isotypes and titers, and for the induction of Th1 cell-mediated immunity. From these studies, at least two lead experimental vaccines will be taken forward into viral challenge and protection studies.

Aim Four will test the efficacy and breadth of protection conferred by immunizing groups of mice with either one or two doses of the experimental vaccines, and then challenging them after various intervals with influenza viruses containing either the same HA gene used to construct the vaccines or viruses containing HA genes with varying degrees of difference from the vaccines. The vectors of this example will induce both humoral and cell-mediated immunity in the upper respiratory mucosa and systemically and will confer strong, long-lasting, and broadly protective immunity.

Today's influenza vaccine production technology and manufacturing capacities are not up to the challenge of producing sufficient vaccine in a timely manner. Currently influenza vaccines are produced in embyonated chicken eggs, a technology that has been widely discussed as too slow. National and international authorities have called for the development of new technologies, and a number of companies and research groups are working on developing alternative approaches, such as production in mammalian cell lines, DNA vaccines, and virally-vectored vaccines (Schwartz and Gellin, JID 2005; 191:1207-1209; Kemble and Greenberg, Vaccine 2003; 21:1789-1795; and Palese, Emerg Infect Dis 2006; 12:1043). Each of these approaches has drawbacks and faces regulatory hurdles, so any reasonable alternative bears careful consideration and an opportunity to prove itself.

In this example, influenza genes will be expressed in the recently discovered mycobacterium, M. shottsii. M. shottsii is related to the live, attenuated vaccine BCG, and which could be produced by any of the more than 40 BCG vaccine production facilities throughout the world. BCG has been used as a live, attenuated vaccine against tuberculosis for over 80 years, and approximately 600 million doses are manufactured annually at a cost of pennies per dose. Production of a mycobacteria-based vaccine could utilize current BCG facilities or similar bioreactors, and would not interrupt the production of standard influenza vaccines.

Experimental Design and Methods

Aim One will evaluate the safety, reactogenicity, dissemination, and persistence of the new vaccine vector in severely immunocompromised (SCID) mice and in immunologically normal (BALB/c) mice. There will be both a short term and a long term component to these studies, which can begin concurrently. This study will use both severely immunocompromised SCID mice, which have neither T cells nor B cells to limit the growth or dissemination of bacteria, and normal BALB/c mice which will respond immunologically to the bacteria and thus show greater tissue reactogenicity. Groups of mice will be lightly anesthetized and intranasally inoculated with either 10⁶ M. shottsii, 10⁶ BCG, or saline (control). It has been shown that M. shottsii grows intracellularly in macrophages, and it is expected that M. shottsii bacilli, as has been shown for other mycobacteria, will also infect and replicate in dendritic and epithelial cells. To assess the persistence of viable mycobacteria, tissue homogenates will be cultured from lymphoid organs or tissues where lymphoid cells cluster, as these areas will contain macrophages and dendritic cells that could be infected with M. shottsii or the positive control mycobacterium BCG. In the upper respiratory tissues, a dense fabric of dendritic cells underlies the epithelial cell layer everywhere along the airways. These dendritic cells sample inhaled antigens and direct the immune response. In the mouse nasopharynx and oropharynx, the organized lymphoid tissues to be dissected in our study include the nasal-associated lymphoid tissue (NALT), and additional lymphoid tissues in the nose, including the nasal turbinates, septum, and lateral nasal passage walls. These are superficial mucosal tissues that are likely to be substantially cooler than mouse body temperature, and most permissive for the growth of M. shottsii. M. shottsii persistence and growth in these tissues will be documented, at least over a period of weeks, as this is expected to induce a strong immune response and the development of memory B cells and T cells (Kyd et al., Vaccine. 2001; 19(17-19):2527-33; Davis, Adv Drug Deliv Rev. 2001; 51(1-3):21-42; Illum and Davis, Adv Drug Deliv Rev. 2001; 51(1-3):1-3; Zuercher et al., J Immunol. 2002; 168(4):1796-803; Porgador et al., Infect Immun. 1998; 66(12):5876-81). Lying deeper in the tissues (and hence warmer) are the cervical, submandibular, palatine, and tracheobronchial lymph nodes (a double chain of lymph nodes located along the trachea and bronchi), which drain the nasopharyngeal, oropharyngeal, and tracheal tissues. Published methods for dissecting and dissociating the cells from these lymph nodes, and from the NALT and nasal passage tissues are available.

To assess the ability of M. shottsii to disseminate to internal organs, the lungs, spleens and livers will be examined and cultured, as these are the organs in which M. tuberculosis and BCG grow in great numbers. These studies are a critical test of our hypothesis that the temperature sensitivity of M. shottsii, like that of cold-adapted viruses, will keep it confined to the superficial tissues of the upper respiratory tract.

Tissues will be aseptically dissected. A portion will be cultured. The remaining tissue will be examined for signs of tissue reactogenicity, such as inflammation or a granulomatous response.

The long term component of these studies will use a SCID mouse model. Survival curves will be compared in SCID mice intranasally inoculated, with either M. shottsii, BCG, or saline, as described above, using eight mice in each group. It is expected that the BCG inoculated mice will succumb between 8 and 11 weeks after inoculation (Sambandamurthy et al., Nat Med. 2002; 8(10):1171-4). Group sizes are powered for comparison of survival curves, which will be compared using the log rank test (Bland and Altman, BMJ 2004; 328 bmj.com; and Bland and Altman, BMJ 1 1998; 317:1572-1580. bmj.com). The first log rank analysis will be conducted when the BCG injected mice have succumbed, and will be used to test the null hypothesis that there is no difference between the survival curves of the BCG and M. shottsii inoculated mice. Note that the log rank test, like the Kaplan-Meier method, is appropriate to use when some individuals have not yet died (in statistical terms, some survival times are censored). If no significant difference is found between the BCG and M. shottsii survival curves, this will mean that M. shottsii is as attenuated as BCG in this model. If the M. shottsii inoculated mice survive longer than the BCG inoculated mice, and the survival curves are clearly different for this reason, this will mean that M. shottsii is more attenuated than BCG in this model. The M. shottsii and saline inoculated groups will be followed for as long as the M. shottsii inoculated mice survive, up to a maximum of 270 days post-inoculation. A final statistical analysis of all three groups, using the log rank test, will be performed. If the survival curve of the M. shottsii mice is not statistically different from the saline control group, this will mean that M. shottsii is avirulent in a severely immunodeficient mouse model that is increasingly being accepted as predictive of safety in immunocompromised people.

Aim Two will develop at least eight different vaccine vector constructs by inserting the influenza hemagglutinin (HA) gene into the chromosomal DNA of the mycobacterial genome, varying the promoters and signal sequences, and optimizing codon usage. The amount, functional activity, and antigenicity of HA produced by each construct will be compared, and four constructs will be selected for more detailed study of vaccine immunogenicity.

For budgetary reasons, only the HA gene of influenza will be inserted into the M. shottsii genome to create a prototype influenza vaccine. Studies using separate plasmids containing each of the influenza genes have shown that immunization with HA alone is sufficient to induce protective immunity in mice (Chen et al., Jpn J Infect Dis 53: 219-228). A great advantage of a bacterial vector, as apposed to a viral vector, is that there is almost no limit to the foreign genetic material that the vector can carry. It is entirely feasible to clone all of the genes in influenza into M. shottsii, including genes encoding the very interesting and conserved internal proteins. The HA gene from the strain A/Fujiian/411/02 will be utilized to construct our vaccine candidates because a series of genetically drifted strains are available for the challenge studies in Aim Four.

The immunogenicity of a vectored vaccine construct is generally positively correlated with the amount of heterologous protein expressed. Two factors that influence the amount of protein produced are the strength of the promoter used, and the extent to which the codons in the foreign DNA have been optimized to match the availability of aminoacyl tRNAs. Both of these factors will be manipulated in constructing the plasmids to be electroporated into M. shottsii in Aim Two. Many highly immunogenic BCG vaccine constructs have used the hsp60 promoter from M. tuberculosis, and this will be one of two promoters that will be used. The second promoter that will be used is the mycobacteriophage L5 promoter, which is more powerful than hsp60 at driving expression of a gene, including the gene for green fluorescent protein in the fluorescent strain of M. shottsii described in Example 3.

Codon optimization for enhanced expression of HIV genes in BCG is a proven strategy for increasing protein production, no doubt because approximately 80% of mycobacterial codons have either G or C in the third position. For example, Kanekiyo and associates found that by optimizing the codons in the HIV p24 gene for expression in BCG, the resulting recombinant BCG produced 40 fold more p24 than did a recombinant BGC containing the wild-type p24 gene sequence (Kanekiyo et al., J Virol. 2005; 79(14):8716-23). In this example, the wild-type and the codon-optimized sequences will be compared in constructing our plasmids. Another factor that may affect the immunogenicity of a foreign antigen expressed by a bacterial vector is whether it is secreted, incorporated into the cell wall, or retained in the cytoplasm. By placing the HA gene behind an appropriate signal sequence, constructs will be arranged exploring all of these variables in M. shottsii, using known techniques.

Each of the genetically engineered strains created will be grown in broth under standardized conditions, and the number of viable M. shottsii bacilli will be quantified by plating aliquots at intervals to determine colony forming units (CFU). Any recombinant strains that grow substantially slower than the parent strain will be eliminated from consideration at this time as model vaccines. It is interesting to note that very high production of a foreign protein can be toxic to the host cell, so it is possible that some constructs predicted to have maximal production of HA may turn out to be too impaired for growth to be good vaccine candidates. Strains that are comparable in growth to the parent strain will be grown and sampled at intervals for HA protein in the culture supernatant or in the sonicate of pelleted cells. Quantification of HA will utilize Western blots, the traditional single radial immunodiffusion (SRID) test, and ELISA assays. The functionality of the recombinant HA will be assessed by assaying its ability to agglutinate erythrocytes and chick cells (CCA). Four of the best HA-producing strains will be selected to take forward into the Aim Three studies as model vaccines, and bank the others for possible future studies.

Aim Three will test the immunogenicity of each of the four vaccine constructs for their ability to induce serum and mucosal antibody isotypes and titers, and for the induction of Th1 cell-mediated immunity. From these studies, at least two lead experimental vaccines will be taken forward into viral challenge and protection studies.

Groups of BALB/c mice will be intranasally immunized either once or twice with the four most promising candidate vaccines developed in Aim Two. At intervals of one month, two months, and six months after vaccination, mice will be euthanized. Serum, nasal washes, and bronchoalveolar lavage fluids will be collected, and assayed for total and isotypic HA-specific antibodies by ELISA (Takada et al., Vaccine 21: 3212-3218; and Kida et al., Virology 122: 38-47). The virus neutralizing activity of antibodies in serum, nasal washes, and bronchoalveolar washes will be measured by plaque-reduction on Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells (Takada et al., Vaccine 21: 3212-3218). Tissue homogenates will be prepared from the spleens, nasal lymphoid tissues, and the bronchial lymph nodes, and stimulated with HA antigen. Flow cytometry will be used to quantify CD4 and CD8 T cells staining for intracellular interferon gamma. These data will be used to select the two most immunogenic candidate vaccines to take forward into the protection studies in Aim Four.

Aim Four will test the efficacy and breadth of protection conferred by immunizing groups of mice with either one or two doses of the experimental vaccines, and then challenging them after various intervals with influenza viruses containing either the same HA gene used to construct the vaccines or viruses containing HA genes with varying degrees of difference from the vaccines. The ability of the unique mycobacterial vector to induce both humoral and cell-mediated immunity in the upper respiratory mucosa and systemically will confer strong, long-lasting, and broadly protective immunity.

Mice will be inoculated with either an M. shottsii-based vaccine or saline. For the vaccination regimens involving two doses, the doses will be given three weeks apart. Mice will be challenged intranasally with 20 times the mouse infectious dose (MID₅₀) of each viral strain. Challenge with the strain A/Fujiian/411/02 will assess protection from a strain with an HA identical to the vaccine strain. Challenge with A/Panama/2007/99 will assess subtypic protection from a genetically distinct H3N2 influenza strain. Challenge with A/Puerto Rico/8/34, which is an H1N1 virus, will assess heterosubtypic immunity. Groups of mice will be challenged either one week or two months after vaccination, and protection will be measured by determining viral titers in lung tissue four and seven days later, after the manner of Takada and associates (Takada et al., Vaccine 21: 3212-3218). Viral titers are calculated as log₁₀ plaque-forming units on MDCK cells per gram of mouse lung tissue.

These studies, if successful, may lead to a highly novel way to induce broadly protective defenses against influenza, using a vaccine that can be rapidly and inexpensively manufactured.

Example 5 A Vector for Veterinary Vaccines Application to Influenza in Swine

In this example the live vaccine vector M. shottsii will be modified to induce immune responses against various veterinary diseases. Because this vector, which is a naturally cold-adapted mycobacterium isolated from fish, is intended for intranasal vaccination, it is expected to induce mucosal as well as systemic immunity. Swine influenza, an emerging illness causing significant economic losses to pork producers, has been selected as the first target disease for which to develop and test a candidate vaccine. This example will demonstrate that the vector is apathogenic in mammals, engineer the vector to express the influenza type 3 hemagglutinin gene, and confirm that intranasal vaccination with the modified vector can induce antibodies to hemagglutinin.

M. shottsii, engineered to express appropriate pathogen antigens, can form the basis of any number of veterinary vaccines. This naturally cold-adapted organism, like the cold-adapted influenza strains in FluMist®, can be administered intranasally, where it would only be able to persist in the superficial upper respiratory tissues. Intranasally administered M. shottsii-vectored vaccines are expected to induce both mucosal and systemic immunity. Because the vaccine antigens would be expressed intracellularly, M. shottsii-vectored vaccines are also expected to induce both cell-mediated and antibody-mediated (humoral) immunity. These attributes lead to the selection of swine influenza (SIV) as the initial veterinary disease vaccine application.

This example will validate the safety and efficacy of the vaccine vector and lead the development of an improved SIV vaccine. Three Aims will be addressed.

Aim One will verify that the live vaccine vector is apathogenic in mammals by evaluating the safety, reactogenicity, dissemination, and persistence of the new vaccine vector in severely immunocompromised (SCID) mice and in immunologically normal (BALB/c) mice.

Aim Two will demonstrate that the influenza hemagglutinin (HA) gene can be efficiently expressed in M. shottsii.

Aim Three will demonstrate that the hemagglutinin expressed by the M. shottsii-vectored vaccine prototype is immunogenic by measuring systemic and mucosal antibody responses in immunized mice.

The importance of the problem of SIV to pork producers is considerable, and is growing in both magnitude and complexity. Influenza was first detected in swine in 1930, and for the next 40 years the only viral subtype isolated was an H1N1 strain. In 1970, a human-type H3N2 type was identified in pigs, which has since become endemic, along with the original H1N1, and more recently a reassortment virus of the H1N2 type. At the present time, it is believed that virtually all U.S. swine herds are infected with one or more influenza strains, and aggressive vaccination strategies are required to even partially control the economic losses associated with swine influenza. See, for example, Webby, “Recent reassortment and evolution of swine and human influenza viruses,” available on the worldwide web at xl3.info/scientific_articles/index.htm, 2002; Wuethrrich, Science 2003; 299 (5612):1502-1505); and Janke, “Swine influenza and porcine respiratory disease complex,” available on the worldwide web at xl3.info/scientific_articles/index.htm, 2002.

Swine influenza causes anorexia, with resulting poor weight gain and inefficient feed conversion. It also causes pneumonia, either alone or in mixed pathogen infections termed Porcine Respiratory Disease Complex. Pneumonia is a cause of significant morbidity and mortality in pigs of all ages; in pregnant sows, abortions and poor fecundity are also sequellae. One hypothesis for the key role of the influenza virus in the mixed infections of Porcine Respiratory Disease Complex is that the infection and destruction of respiratory epithelial cells by the influenza virus renders the host susceptible to subsequent co-infection by pathogens that are endemic in the environment. Thus an improved swine influenza vaccine that could induce sufficient mucosal immunity to prevent the initial destruction of upper respiratory epithelium could reduce the disease burden of influenza alone and in combination infections.

M. shottsii as a member of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex. The Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex is a phylogenetic grouping that includes BCG, which is an attenuated strain of M. bovis that is used both as a vaccine for TB and as a vaccine vector. BCG is highly immunogenic and acts as an adjuvant, due largely to its lipid structure, and this property has been exploited to produce a number of experimental vaccines, some of which are currently in clinical trials. BCG organisms engineered to express foreign antigens from HIV, malaria, schistosomiasis, and other pathogens have proven to induce strong foreign antigen-specific T cell responses, neutralizing antibody responses, and exceptionally durable immunity (Barletta et al., Res Microbiol. 1990; 141(7-8):931-9; Fuerst et al., Biotechnol Ther. 1991; 2(1-2):159-78; Stover et al., Nature. 1991; 351(6326):456-60; Aldovini and Young, Nature 1991; 351(6326):479-82; Winter et al., Gene. 1991; 109(1):47-59; Barletta et al., Res Microbiol. 1990; 141(7-8):931-9; Fuerst et al., Biotechnol Ther. 1991; 2(1-2):159-78; Stover et al., Nature 1991; 351(6326):456-60; Aldovini and Young, Nature 1991; 351(6326):479-82; and Winter et al., Gene. 1991; 109(1):47-59). As demonstrated in Example 3, M. shottsii can be engineered to express foreign genes and, thus, can serve as a vaccine vector. Because of the very great lipid similarity between BCG and M. shottsii, it is likely that genetically engineered M. shottsii-based vaccines will, like BCG, induce strong and durable responses involving both antibody- and cell-mediated immunity.

Why haven't live cold-adapted influenza viruses been utilized as vaccines for swine influenza? The answer lies in the nearly unique capacity of swine to serve as reassortment vessels for multiple avian and mammalian strains of influenza (Webby, “Recent reassortment and evolution of swine and human influenza viruses,” available on the world wide web at xl3.info/scientific_articles/index.htm, 2002; Wuethrich, Science 2003; 299:1502-1505; Brown, Vet Microbiol. 2000; 74: 29-46; and Bridges, “Human influenza viruses and the potential for inter-species transmission,” available on the worldwide web at xl3.info/scientific_articles/index.htm). Co-infection of pigs with avian and human viruses is one of the mechanisms by which a potentially pandemic reassorted influenza strain could be unleashed, and therefore vaccination of swine with live influenza viruses of any sort has been considered to be risky (Wuethrich, Science 2003; 299:1502-1505; Bridges, “Human influenza viruses and the potential for inter-species transmission,” available on the worldwide web at xl3.info/scientific_articles/index.htm). In contrast, immunization with an M. shottsii strain expressing only the coding sequence from a hemagglutinin gene, without the flanking sequences that facilitate recombination, would convey little or no risk of reassortment occurring. In future vaccine prototypes, we will further reduce the influenza genetic material to key epitopes, and change the nucleic acid sequences to codons optimized for transcription by mycobacteria.

All current swine influenza vaccines consist of killed influenza viruses, and like most killed vaccines, they have the drawback of inducing only short-lived immunity. Significant decreases in antibody titers have been reported within 60 days of vaccination. An additional drawback of killed vaccines is that they induce only antibodies, and not cell-mediated immunity. While antibodies alone can be protective against influenza infection, cell-mediated immunity speeds recovery and provides a broader immunity that can protect against influenza strains not well matched to the vaccine strain. A major problem with the current killed virus vaccine is that maternal antibodies, even low titers (1:10) that are no longer protective, can prevent the successful immunization of piglets. Researchers are examining new vaccine strategies that may overcome the maternal antibody problem, such as DNA vaccination or using a viral vaccine vector. These approaches, like the use of the intracellular vector M. shottsii, should succeed because the recombinant antigen is synthesized within cells and displayed on their surface, rather than circulating outside of cells where maternal antibody can bind up much of the vaccine antigen.

One important point from the literature on SIV that supports our approach is the fact that pigs can be successfully immunized against swine influenza through the intranasal route of vaccination (Lim, Jap J Vet Res 2001; 48:197-203). Intranasal vaccination is the best way to induce mucosal immunity in the respiratory tissues that are the site of initial influenza virus infection. A second appeal of intranasal vaccination for pork producers is that it eliminates the risk of broken needles in meat (Warren, “Modern SIV vaccination strategies,” available on the world wide web at xl3.info/scintific_articles/index.htm).

Aim One will evaluate the safety, reactogenicity, dissemination, and persistence of the new vaccine vector in severely immunocompromised (SCID) mice and in immunologically normal (BALB/c) mice. There will be both a short term and a long term component to these studies, which can begin concurrently. The short term studies will use both severely immunocompromised SCID mice, which have neither T cells nor B cells to limit the growth or dissemination of bacteria, and normal BALB/c mice which will respond immunologically to the bacteria and thus show greater tissue reactogenicity. Groups of mice will be intranasally inoculated with either 10⁷ M. shottsii, 10⁷ BCG, or saline (control). The procedure involves placing 10 microliters of liquid on the external nares, and allowing the mice to inhale it naturally. This method does not require anesthesia. To assess the persistence of viable mycobacteria, tissue homogenates will be cultured from lymphoid organs or tissues where lymphoid cells cluster, as these areas will contain macrophages and dendritic cells that could be infected with M. shottsii or the positive control mycobacterium BCG. In the upper respiratory tissues, a dense fabric of dendritic cells also underlies the epithelial cell layer everywhere along the airways, where they sample inhaled antigens and direct the immune response. In the mouse nasopharynx and oropharynx, the organized lymphoid tissues to be dissected in our study include the nasal-associated lymphoid tissue (NALT), and additional lymphoid tissues in the nose, including the nasal turbinates, septum, and lateral nasal passage walls. These are superficial mucosal tissues that are likely to be substantially cooler than mouse body temperature, and most permissive for the growth of M. shottsii. M. shottsii persistence and growth in these tissues will be documented, at least over a period of weeks, as this is expected to induce a strong immune response and the development of memory B cells and T cells. Lying deeper in the tissues (and hence warmer) are the cervical, submandibular, palatine, and tracheobronchial lymph nodes (a double chain of lymph nodes located along the trachea and bronchi), which drain the nasopharyngeal, oropharyngeal, and tracheal tissues. Following previously published methods, cells from these lymph nodes and from the NALT and nasal passage tissues will be dissected and dissociated.

The internal organs that will be examined for the presence of M. shottsii are the lungs, spleen and liver, as these are the organs in which M. tuberculosis and BCG grow in great numbers. Any evidence that we obtain that M. shottsii can disseminate to and survive in these organs will disprove our hypothesis that the temperature sensitivity of M. shottsii will keep it confined to the superficial tissues of the upper respiratory tract. Following humane euthanasia with CO₂, tissues will sterilely dissect the tissues, a portion sent for culture, and the remaining tissue examined for signs of tissue reactogenicity, such as inflammation or a granulomatous response.

The long term component of these studies will use a SCID mouse model. Survival curves will be compared in SCID mice intranasally inoculated with either M. shottsii, BCG, or saline, as described above, using eight mice in each group. It is expected that the BCG inoculated mice will succumb between 8 and 11 weeks after inoculation. Group sizes are powered for comparison of survival curves, which will be compared using the log rank test. The first log rank analysis will be conducted when the BCG injected mice have succumbed, and will be used to test the null hypothesis that there is no difference between the survival curves of the BCG and M. shottsii inoculated mice. Note that the log rank test, like the Kaplan-Meier method, is appropriate to use when some individuals have not yet died (in statistical terms, some survival times are censored). No significant difference between the BCC and M. shottsii survival curves mean that M. shottsii is as attenuated as BCG in this model. If the M. shottsii inoculated mice survive longer than the BCG inoculated mice, and the survival curves are clearly different for this reason, this will mean that M. shottsii is more attenuated than BCG in this model. The M. shottsii and saline inoculated groups will be followed for as long as the M. shottsii inoculated mice survive, up to a maximum of 270 days post-injection. A final statistical analysis of all three groups, using the log rank test, will be performed. If the survival curve of the M. shottsii mice is not statistically different from the saline control group, this will mean that M. shottsii is avirulent in a severely immunodeficient mouse model.

Aim Two will demonstrate that the influenza hemagglutinin (HA) gene can be efficiently expressed in M. shottsii. The HA gene of influenza will be inserted into the M. shottsii genome to create a prototype influenza vaccine. Studies using separate plasmids containing each of the influenza genes have shown that immunization with HA alone is sufficient to induce protective immunity in mice. A great advantage of a bacterial vector, as opposed to a viral vector, is that there is almost no limit to the foreign genetic material that the vector can carry. It is entirely feasible to clone all of the genes in influenza into M. shottsii, including genes encoding the very interesting and conserved internal proteins. The HA gene from the strain A/Fujiian/411/02 (an H3N2 subtype) will be utilized to construct our vaccine candidates because a series of genetically drifted strains are available for future challenge studies that could examine the ability of the vaccine to induce heterosubtypic immunity.

The immunogenicity of a vectored vaccine construct is generally positively correlated with the amount of heterologous protein expressed. The amount of protein produced is influenced by the strength of the promoter driving expression of the gene. Most recombinant BCG-vectored vaccines have used the hsp60 promoter. Instead, the mycobacteriophage L5 promoter will be used, which has been found to be even more powerful than Hsp60 at driving expression of a gene, including the gene for green fluorescent protein in our fluorescent strain of M. shottsii mentioned earlier. The recombinant strain will be grown and sampled at intervals for HA protein in the culture supernatant and also in the sonicate of pelleted cells.

Quantification of HA will utilize Western blots, the traditional single radial immunodiffusion (SRID) test, and ELISA assays. The functionality of the recombinant HA will be assessed by assaying its ability to agglutinate erythrocytes and chick cells (CCA). If HA gene expression or growth of the recombinant M. shottsii made with the L5 promoter are not satisfactory, the more traditional Hsp60 promoter will be used to drive expression of the HA gene.

Aim Three will demonstrate that the hemagglutinin expressed by the M. shottsii-vectored vaccine prototype is immunogenic by measuring systemic and mucosal antibody responses in immunized mice. Groups of BALB/c mice will be intranasally immunized either once or twice with the candidate vaccine developed in Aim Two. At intervals of one month and three months after vaccination, mice will be euthanized. Serum, nasal washes, and bronchoalveolar lavage fluids will be collected, and assayed for total and isotypic HA-specific antibodies by ELISA. The virus neutralizing activity of antibodies in serum, nasal washes, and bronchoalveolar washes will be measured by plaque-reduction on Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells (Takada et al., Vaccine 21: 3212-3218).

Aim One studies are expected to find widespread dissemination of BCG, especially in the SCID mice, while finding M. shottsii only in the very superficial tissues of the nasopharynx. In Aim Two, significant quantities of HA are expected in sonicated cells, but possibly not in the supernate of cultures. With Aim Three, detecting at least serum IgG antibodies to HA is expected, but detecting mucosal antibodies may prove more difficult for technical reasons.

The complete disclosure of all patents, patent applications, and publications, and electronically available material (including, for instance, nucleotide sequence submissions in, e.g., GenBank and RefSeq, and amino acid sequence submissions in, e.g., SwissProt, PIR, PRF, PDB, and translations from annotated coding regions in GenBank and RefSeq) cited herein are incorporated by reference. The foregoing detailed description and examples have been given for clarity of understanding only. No unnecessary limitations are to be understood therefrom. The invention is not limited to the exact details shown and described, for variations obvious to one skilled in the art will be included within the invention defined by the claims.

All headings are for the convenience of the reader and should not be used to limit the meaning of the text that follows the heading, unless so specified.

For any method disclosed herein that includes discrete steps, the steps may be conducted in any feasible order. And, as appropriate, any combination of two or more steps may be conducted simultaneously. 

1. A transgenic Mycobacterium shottsii (M. shottsii) comprising at least one heterologous antigen and/or immunogen, wherein the at least one heterologous antigen and/or immunogen is encoded by a vector that replicates extra-chromosomally or is integrated into the mycobacterial chromosome.
 2. The transgenic M. shottsii of claim 1 wherein the transgenic M. shottsii comprises a plurality of heterologous antigens and/or immunogens.
 3. The transgenic M. shottsii of claim 1, wherein the transgenic M. shottsii does not survive at an incubation temperature of 30 C. or above.
 4. The transgenic M. shottsii comprising at least one heterologous antigen and/or immunogen of claim 1 wherein the heterologous antigen and/or immunogen is selected from the group consisting of a Mycobacterium tuberculosis antigen and/or immunogen, an influenza virus antigen and/or immunogen, and a human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) antigen and/or immunogen.
 5. A composition comprising the transgenic M. shottsii comprising at least one heterologous antigen and/or immunogen of claim
 4. 6. The composition of claim 5 wherein the influenza virus antigen or immunogen comprises a hemaglutinin (HA) antigen or immunogen.
 7. The composition of claim 5 wherein the influenza virus infects a subject selected from the group consisting of human and swine.
 8. A method of inducing an immune response in a subject, the method comprising administering the composition of claim
 5. 9. A pharmaceutical composition comprising the transgenic M. shottsii comprising at least one heterologous antigen and/or immunogen of claim 1 and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.
 10. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 9 wherein the heterologous antigen and/or immunogen comprises a Mycobacterium tuberculosis antigen and/or immunogen.
 11. A method of inducing an immune response to a Mycobacterium tuberculosis antigen and/or immunogen in a mammalian subject, the method comprising administering the pharmaceutical composition of claim 10 to the subject.
 12. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 9 further comprising an adjuvant.
 13. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 9 formulated for administration to the mucosa.
 14. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 9 formulated for intranasal administration.
 15. A method of inducing an immune response to an antigen or immunogen in a subject, the method comprising administering to the subject a pharmaceutical composition of claim
 9. 16. The method of claim 15 wherein the pharmaceutical composition is administered to the subject's mucosa.
 17. The method of claim 15 wherein the pharmaceutical composition is administered intranasally.
 18. The method of claim 15 wherein administration of the pharmaceutical composition induces an immune response in genital tissue of the subject.
 19. The method of claim 15 wherein the mammalian subject is immunocompromised.
 20. A method of inducing an immune response to a heterologous antigen or immunogen in a subject, the method comprising administering to the subject a transgenic M. shottsii comprising at least one heterologous antigen and/or immunogen of claim
 1. 21. A The method of claim 20 wherein the heterologous antigen and/or immunogen comprises a heterologous antigen and/or immunogen of a human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) or an opportunistic infection that co-occurs with HIV infection, the method comprising administering a composition comprising the transgenic M. shottsii of claim
 1. 